U.S. Trade Dollars

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U.S. Trade Dollars

Posted by SA on 06 Aug 2009 | Tagged as: U.S. Trade Dollars

Until very recently, the U.S Dollar has been the world’s leading currency.  But that wasn’t always the case.

When the U.S. began doing more trade with Asia in the late 19th-century, the Chinese  preferred the Mexican peso over the U.S. silver dollar because the peso contained more silver – 416 grains versus 412.5 grains.

To conduct business in the Far East, American traders had to exchange their silver dollars for pesos, and then pay a commission for the exchange.

By 1873, the situation had become irksome enough for Congress to pass the Coinage Act of 1873, which authorized the issuance of a new silver dollar that would weigh 420 grains.  Called the U.S. Trade Dollar, it was designed by William Barber and replaced the Seated Liberty Silver Dollar.

The obverse of the coin shows Lady Liberty seated on a bale of cotton in front of a sheaf of wheat.  This not-so-subtle imagery showcased America’s leading crops, and the olive branch in her hand was a gesture of peace.  Liberty faces left, or west, another nod to Asian interests.

To advertise the new dollar’s more generous silver content, the term “420 Grains .900 Fine” is inscribed on the reverse below an eagle clutching a brace of arrows and another olive branch.

Most of the Trade Dollars produced between 1873 and 1875 were circulated in China, where they were an immediate hit.  The coin became the official Chinese trade coin, ousting the Mexican peso once and for all.

Many coins from that period have an Asian chop mark used to verify its authenticity.  Depending on the rareness of the chop mark, this can either add or subtract from their value.

The Comstock Load of 1859 had produced more than $400 million dollars worth of gold and silver.  And silver miners began dumping it into U.S. markets.  By 1876, the price of silver had dropped so far that the silver in the Trade Dollar was barely worth 80 cents.

Most of the coins came back to America where they could at least be traded at face value.  But because the bullion in the coins was worth significantly less, many people were duped by swindlers who bought the coins at bullion prices and then used them as dollars to buy goods or pay workers.

Commercial production of Trade Dollars stopped in 1878, but production of proof coins for collectors was begun in 1879.  These coins were produced in very small quantities.  There were only ten in 1884 and five in 1885.

Produced on the sly, their existence was unknown until 1908.  Consequently, they are some of the rarest U.S. coins in existence.

In 1887, the United States Treasury agreed to redeem non-mutilated trade dollars and more than 8 million were turned in.

Just how valuable are these coins?  In January of 2006, an 1885 PF-66 sold for $3.3 million.

Read more about collecting silver dollars here.