-40%

1793 CHAIN 1C PCGS F 15

$ 13305.6

Availability: 100 in stock
  • Circulated/Uncirculated: Circulated
  • Mint Location: Philadelphia
  • Certification: PCGS
  • All returns accepted: Returns Accepted
  • Refund will be given as: Money Back
  • Certification Number: 40798483
  • Item must be returned within: 14 Days
  • Return shipping will be paid by: Buyer
  • Grade: F 15

    Description

    eBay Store
    About Us
    Add as Favorite
    Feedback
    Payment
    Shipping
    Contact
    1793 CHAIN 1C PCGS F 15
    Grading Service: PCGS
    Cert Number: 40798483
    SKU: 130670
    Coin History
    The first coins struck within the premises of the United States Mint were 36,103 large Cents delivered March 1-12, 1793.  These coins display Henry Voigt's Chain design.  Survivors are prized not only for their historical significance and rarity, but also as examples of a one-year type.  In fact, the Philadelphia Mint would go on to strike
    two
    more types of large Cent before the calender advanced to 1794.  Disappointment with the Chain design seems to have been the primary reason why this type was replaced so quickly.  According to Walter Breen (1988), the March 18, 1793 edition of
    The Mail, or Claypoole's Daily Advertiser
    carried this unflattering report about the new Chain Cent:
    The American cents...do not answer our expectations.  The chain on the reverse is but a bad omen for liberty, and Liberty herself appears to be in a fright.  May she not justly cry out in the words of the Apostle, "Alexander the coppersmith hath done me much evil: the Lord reward him according to his works!"
    The next month (April 1793), the Mint introduced the Wreath Cent in an attempt to improve its image among the contemporary public.
    Store Categories
    Stores Home
    Colonials
    Half Cents
    Large Cents
    Small Cents
    Two-Cent Pieces
    Three-Cent Silvers
    Nickels
    Half Dimes
    Dimes
    Twenty-Cent Pieces
    Quarter Dollars
    Half Dollars
    Flowing Hair Dollars
    Seated Dollars
    Trade Dollars
    Morgan Dollars
    Peace Dollars
    One Dollar Gold
    Two Fifty Gold
    Three Dollar Gold
    Five Dollar Gold
    Ten Dollar Gold
    Twenty Dollar Gold
    Commemorative Gold
    Commemorative Silver
    Patterns
    Territorial Gold
    Three-Cent Nickels
    Draped Bust Dollars
    Gobrecht Dollars
    Other