Fremont Coin Co., Inc. and Fremont Coin & Currency Co. maintain corporate offices in Las Vegas, Nevada for the past 47 years. Fremont Coin Co., Inc. is one of the oldest first-generation bullion and currency dealers in the United States. We specialize in both Gold and Silver American Eagles, type gold, .999 silver bars in all denominations, Morgan Dollars, Carson City's and United States Currency. Call us at 702-382-1469 Monday - Friday. Or E-Mail Sheila at: sheila@fremontcoin.com

 

Fremont Coin Co., Inc. is one of the country's oldest, first-generation gold and silver bullion dealers, established 1956. ANA-LM No. 546. Log on at www.fremontcoin.com, or e-mail Sheila at: www.fremontcoin.com




 

On-line Catalogue


Fremont Coin Co., Inc. is one of the country's oldest, first-generation gold and silver bullion dealers, established 1956. ANA-LM No. 546. Log on at www.fremontcoin.com, or e-mail Sheila at: www.fremontcoin.com
 

One of America's oldest first-generation coin-and-currency companies.
National distribution warehouse facilities and corporate offices
based in Las Vegas, Nevada for over 47 years.
Mail-order sales nationwide.
Established 1956. LM ANA 546.

Fremont Coin Co., Inc. is one of the country's oldest, first-generation gold and silver bullion dealers, established 1956. ANA-LM No. 546. Log on at www.fremontcoin.com, or e-mail Sheila at: www.fremontcoin.com


We're one of the country's busiest, and best-known,
Silver Dollar and Carson City Morgan Dollar Dealers...


Enjoy your visit.

   

Carson City Morgan Dollars from Fremont Coin Co., Inc. www.fremontcoin.com
 

1880-S Morgan Dollar MS66 from Fremont Coin Co., Inc. www.fremontcoin.com

1900-) Morgan Dollar MS66 from Fremont Coin Co., Inc. www.fremontcoin.com

1881-S Morgan Dollar MS66 from Fremont Coin Co., Inc. www.fremontcoin.com

   


Carson City Morgan Dollars from Fremont Coin Co., Inc. www.fremontcoin.com
Carson City Morgan Dollars from Fremont Coin Co., Inc. www.fremontcoin.com
U.S. Morgan Silver Dollars
Nevada's Wild West Carson City “CC” Mint


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the reverse side of this coin


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the reverse side of this coin


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the reverse side of this coin

1881-CC graded by PCGS. Available at Fremont Coin Co., Inc. http://www.fremontcoin.com

1882-CC graded by PCGS. Available at Fremont Coin Co., Inc. http://www.fremontcoin.com

1883-CC graded by PCGS. Available at Fremont Coin Co., Inc. http://www.fremontcoin.com

Fremont Coin Co., Inc. has thousands of silver dollars in stock!
Click on our Simply Slabs link above to view details of Carson City's for Serious Collectors.

padCarson City's and Morgan Dollars for the serious coin collector are available from Fremont Coin Co., Inc., one of the nation's oldest, first-generation silver dollar companies. Log on at: www.fremontcoin.com
              
  Carson City Morgan Dollars for the serious coin collector are available from Fremont Coin Co., Inc., one of the nation's oldest, first-generation silver dollar companies. Log on at: www.fremontcoin.comCarson City Morgan Silver Dollars Carson City Morgan Dollars for the serious coin collector are available from Fremont Coin Co., Inc., one of the nation's oldest, first-generation silver dollar companies. Log on at: www.fremontcoin.com

Silver was mined in the West.

The Comstock Load of the 1850s and 1860s produced so much silver that a special U.S. mint was set up at Carson City. So much silver was mined that its value fell and silver dollars became a token coin. Today this is hard to imagine.
For those of us who remember the Hunt Brothers crazy silver speculations of 25-26 years ago, the skyrocketing of silver values to over $50 an ounce was an awesome reality. The entire country went mad as silver and gold rose to great heights and then fell. People who speculated in gold and silver when gold was valued about a $1,000 an ounce and silver at $50 an ounce were crushed as gold suddenly dropped to a $180 (then less) and silver,
almost overnight to a few dollars per ounce
.


Carson City Morgan Silver Dollars are genuine, "authentic" pieces of American Frontier History.

To be sure, it’s amazing that a single one of these Silver Dollars has survived the test of time over the last 110 years.
They are one of the most collectible and authentic original heirlooms from the “Old West.” These are the very same
    old coins that changed hands from folks heading west in Conestoga Wagons, to General storekeepers, miners,
    and  saloon hall gals. And Fremont Coin Co., Inc. is one of the America's busiest Silver Dollar coin companies.

     The silver in these dollars was mined from the rich Comstock Lode, discovered in the mountains near
     Carson City  Nevada. The Carson City Mint was established there in 1870, and although it was in existence
     for only 24 years, it produced many coins which have endured as collectors items,
among them the 13 piece Morgan dollar series of 1878-1893.

    
Morgan Silver Dollars link with an historic period in our nation's history give these dollars an added appeal.
     These large coins contain ninety percent silver, which somehow survived the massive coin melts of the early 1900's.

1884-CC GSA available from Fremont Coin Co., Inc., one of the nation's oldest, first-generation silver dollar companies. Log on at: www.fremontcoin.com

The 1884-CC above (available from Fremont Coin Co., Inc.) is an example of a GSA Morgan silver dollar. 
Most of the GSA dollars had been stored in government vaults since 1899,
when the Carson City Mint officially lost its status as a US mint. 


     Morgan dollars were discovered by a Treasury audit in 1964, after nearly a century of obscurity in their vaults.
That’s why of all Morgan Silver Dollars, Carson City Mint examples remain among the most elusive and collectible
     US Mint silver dollars today. For instance
while it is true that the history of the 1884-CC issue is one of the most interesting in the Morgan series, it has also become one of the most sought after from that series. Previously the 1884-CC was considered a prime rarity, since only 5,000-10,000 survived in circulated condition and only a few mint-state
specimens were available. That is until sealed bags began to be released by the Treasury in the 1960s.

After the last of these Uncirculated Morgan's were sold by the government in the 1960s, the 1884-CC Morgan
became more affordable -- yet still by far the scarcest Mint issue for the date.
Their link with an historic period in our nation's history give these dollars an added appeal, especially after so many
were discovered by a Treasury audit in 1964,
after nearly a century of obscurity in the vaults.

Carson City Morgan Dollars from Fremont Coin Co., Inc. www.fremontcoin.com

OFFICIAL US MINT SPECIFICATIONS

SPECIFICATIONS:

Diameter: 38.1 millimeters Weight: 26.73 grams
Composition: .900 silver, .100 copper Edge: Reeded Net
Weight: .77344 ounce pure silver


• Carson City Silver Dollars are authentic U.S. Government issued coins.
• Each bears the famous “CC” mint mark on the reverse. denoting its official origin at the
United States Mint in Carson City, Nevada.
• These Silver Dollars are large coins, about 1½ inches in diameter and contain
.77344 troy ounces of pure silver.

Fremont Coin Co., Inc. is one of the olest, first-generation silver dollar companies in the United States. ANA-546; log on at: www.fremontcoin.com
Morgan 'Silver' Dollars
Carson City Morgan 'Silver' Dollars in U.S. Government GSA Holders

Carson City Morgan Dollars from Fremont Coin Co., Inc. www.fremontcoin.com

     
    Morgan 'Silver' Dollars are a valuable memento of an era
in American history when pioneers were challenging the West.
 

     U.S. Morgan Silver Dollars are the most popular and widely collected of all U.S. silver coins. The Morgan Silver Dollar series ran from 1878 through 1904 until the bullion supply became exhausted and was resumed again in 1921.

     This Dollar is the most widely collected coin today. Minted between 1878 and 1904, and again in 1921, in Philadelphia, New Orleans, San Francisco, and Carson City, these classic silver coins served as the backbone of daily commerce, both nationally and internationally, for decades.

     Named after their designer, James T. Morgan, Morgan Silver Dollars are also known as Liberty Head dollars because of the radiant, dignified profile of Miss Liberty featured on the obverse. The reverse depicts the inspiring image of an American Eagle, standing tall with widespread wings, perched confidently upon the olive branch of peace and the arrows of military strength.

 

     The Morgan Silver Dollar is America's most popular collector
coin. Minted in huge quantities between 1878 and 1904,
and again in 1921, over 650 million pieces were struck.

The issuance of the Morgan silver dollar in 1878 was a victory for silver advocates in their long standing feud against the Gold Bugs. 
Morgan dollars were well received in western states. 
Eastern power brokers viewed the white metal and the political movement behind it
as a threat to their economic security. 

     Few coins in U.S. history have been greeted with more indifference at the time of their release than the Morgan Silver dollar. And few, if any, have then gone on to stimulate such passionate excitement among collectors. The Morgan silver dollar was named for its designer George T. Morgan. These coins were minted from 1878 until 1904 in the Philadelphia, New Orleans, San Francisco, and Carson City mints. Letters signifying the mint of the coin (commonly referred to as a mint mark) were stamped on the reverse side of the coin underneath the branches on which the Eagle sits. Only Morgan silver dollars coined in Philadelphia have no mint mark.  

     The Morgan dollar's story is a Cinderella tale: Until the 1960s, it was largely ignored by the public. Since then, it has gradually become among the most widely pursued and desired of all U. S. coins. Although many collectors find the challenge of assembling a complete date and mintmark set in Mint State compelling, others satisfy themselves with collecting just Carson City's. Exceptional specimens are also sought after by type collectors.

     Major keys include 1895, 1893-S, 1895-O, 1892-S, 1889-CC, 1884-S and 1879-CC. Mint records show that 12,000 business-strike dollars were made in Philadelphia in 1895, but only proofs are known; the mintage of these is 880. Proofs were made for every year in the series, but only a few brilliant proofs-variously reported at 15 to 24-are known for 1921. Proof-like Morgans also are highly prized and are collected in both Proof-like (PL) and Deep-Mirror Proof-like (DPL or DMPL).

     The coin features a stylized portrait of Liberty on the dated side and an eagle with outstretched wings on the reverse. Its designer was George T. Morgan. The large mintage was caused by an Act of Congress that wanted to please the silver mining interests. Congress required the Treasury to purchase up to four million ounces of newly mined silver each month and mint it into dollar coins. In 1918, Congress reversed itself and caused over 270 million pieces to be melted. Other meltings took place through the years but it is likely that more than 300 million pieces still exist.

     Because many coins sat for years in Treasury vaults, Morgan dollars are available in virtually perfect, blemish free uncirculated condition for as little as $200. Vast quantities of the more common dates exist today in uncirculated grades. Even many rarer dates are available in the higher grades. The enormous popularity of the series with collectors, however, keeps prices strong.

Carson City's and  Morgan Dollars for the serious coin collector are available from Fremont Coin Co., Inc., one of the nation's oldest, first-generation silver dollar companies. Log on at: www.fremontcoin.com
   SPECIFICATIONS:

Diameter: 38.1 millimeters Weight: 26.73 grams Composition: .900 silver
.100 copper Edge: Reeded Net Weight: .77344 ounce pure silver

Carson City Morgan Dollars Slabbed, GSA's & Raw

GSA Carson City Morgan Dollars for the serious coin collector are available from Fremont Coin Co., Inc., one of the nation's oldest, first-generation silver dollar companies. Log on at: www.fremontcoin.com
The Legendary Wild West Mint

The Carson City Mint is perhaps the most fabled of all U.S. Mints. Opened in the Nevada badlands in 1870 to process the Comstock Lode, the richest silver deposit ever discovered, it embodies all of the adventure and romance of America’s Wild West.

Carson City was little more than the proverbial two-horse town until the Comstock Lode was discovered nearby in 1859. This fabulous mineral claim produced more than $400 million in silver and gold (in 19th century dollars), and changed the West forever. Comstock wealth created the State of Nevada, built the city of San Francisco, and financed the Civil War. It also made the fortunes of the some of California’s most prominent families, including that of the newspaper mogul William Randolph Hearst.

Although legislation authorizing the creation of the U.S. Mint at Carson City was passed by both houses of Congress on March 3, 1863, actual construction did not begin until three years later. Work proceeded so slowly that three more years passed before coining machinery arrived. The Carson City Mint was designed in 1866 by Supervising Architect of the Treasury Alfred Bult Mullet, and was both his first major project and the building which signaled the town’s rising importance to the national economy. Begun only eight years after the founding of Carson City in 1858, the Mint was a response to the silver boom in the Comstock Mining District. As one author suggests, the building “showed Federal recognition of the value of the mines located in the ‘hinterlands’ of Nevada.” It was the region’s first substantial building, and thus a potent sign of both the government’s authority and the town’s new wealth. Manufactured by Morgan & Orr in Philadelphia, who created many of the coining presses then in use throughout the world, the first six-ton press arrived at the Carson Mint in 1869. As was the custom of the day, it was painted with a large "1" to signify the first press located in the coiner's department. 

The Carson City Mint was only open for 23 years and only minted silver dollars for 13 years. Plagued by corruption and embezzlement, and with the flow of Comstock silver drying up, this true Wild West Mint ceased all coin production in 1893. Morgan dollars carrying the “CC” mintmark are therefore extremely popular among collectors because of their colorful Old West history, small mintage figures, and short minting history.


Carson City Mint 1879

The Carson City Mint building as it appeared in 1879.  Image courtesy of Library of Congress.
                                                                                                                                                                      The Carson City Mint circa 1890 The Carson City Mint circa 1890

“After a personal inspection of this building...I believe it to be one of the most faithfully and economically constructed buildings in the United States; indeed, I am surprised at the result accomplished, when the enormous prices of labor and material and the difficulties and embarrassments incident to insufficient appropriations are considered.”

—Alfred B. Mullett, Supervising Architect, 1869
 



More than half a billion Morgan dollars were struck from 1878 through 1904, with production taking place at the main mint in Philadelphia and the branches in New Orleans, San Francisco and Carson City. Carson City production was generally much lower and ended altogether after that branch was closed in 1893. The coin came back for one final curtain call in 1921, when more than 86 million examples were produced under the terms of the Pittman Act at Philadelphia, San Francisco and Denver-but that was a double-edged sword: Under the 1918 legislation, more than 270 million older silver dollars, almost all Morgans, had been melted. The law required replacements for these, but most were of the Peace design, which replaced the Morgan version at the end of 1921.

    Even as the numismatic hobby underwent rapid growth beginning in the 1930s, interest in other collecting areas far outpaced the attention paid to the large Morgan cartwheels. Most collectors preferred the lower face-value coins (with their lower cost) that were readily available in circulation. Although it was possible to order silver dollars through banks or directly from the Treasury, few noticed or cared. In the late 1930s, however, several Washington dealers learned that the Treasury Department's Cash Room near the White House was paying out uncirculated Carson City dollar-coins having a market value of $5 or more at the time! More than a few dealers quietly exploited this discovery throughout the 1940s and '50s.

       In the early 1960s, with silver rising in price, opportunists recognized the chance to turn fast profits by redeeming silver certificates for dollar coins-mostly Morgans-at the Treasury. By the time the government closed this lucrative window in 1964, only 2.9 million cartwheels were left in its vaults, almost all of them scarce Carson City Morgans. These were dispersed by the General Services Administration in a series of mail-bid sales from 1972 through 1980, earning big profits for the government and triggering great new interest in silver dollars.

       In all, some 657 million Morgan dollars were produced in 96 different date-and-mint combinations. Hundreds of millions were melted over the years-by the government under the Pittman Act and the Silver Act of 1942, and by private refiners since the late 1960s, when rising silver prices made this profitable. Despite all the melting, Americans had more than enough Morgans to fill their daily needs, since the dollars circulated regularly only in the West. As a result, huge stockpiles remained in the Treasury's vaults, as well as bank vaults nationwide. This explains why so many Morgan dollars are so well preserved today despite their age; few saw actual use.

     The coins were discontinued in 1904 after the government exhausted its supply of silver bullion. In 1918, Congress passed the Pittman Act and recalled over 270 million silver dollars for melting. The silver dollar gained new life in America in 1921 and in that year the Philadelphia, San Francisco, and Denver mints coined the last Morgan silver dollars.  
     Political pressure, not public demand, brought the Morgan dollar into being. There was no real need for a new silver dollar in the late 1870s; the last previous "cartwheel," the Liberty Seated dollar, had been legislated out of existence in 1873, and hardly anyone missed it.    
     Silver-mining interests did miss the dollar, though, and lobbied Congress forcefully for its return. The Comstock Lode in Nevada was yielding huge quantities of silver, with ore worth $36 million being extracted annually. After several futile attempts, the silver forces in Congress-led by Representative Richard ("Silver Dick") Bland of Missouri-finally succeeded in winning authorization for a new silver dollar when Congress passed the Bland-Allison Act on February 28, 1878. This Act required the Treasury to purchase at market levels between two million and four million troy ounces of silver bullion every month to be coined into dollars. This amounted to a massive subsidy, coming at a time when the dollar's face value exceeded its intrinsic worth by nearly 10%.

      In November 1877, nearly four months before passage of the Bland-Allison Act, the Treasury saw the handwriting on the wall and began making preparations for a new dollar coin. Mint Director Henry P. Linderman ordered Chief Engraver William Barber and one of his assistants, George T. Morgan, to prepare pattern dollars, with the best design to be used on the new coin. Actually, Linderman fixed this "contest" in Morgan's favor; he had been dissatisfied with the work of the two Barbers-William and his son, Charles-and in 1876 had hired Morgan, a talented British engraver, with plans to entrust him with new coin designs. At that time, resumption of silver dollar coinage was not yet planned, and Morgan began work on designs intended for the half dollar. Following Linderman's orders that a head of Liberty should replace the full-figure depiction then in use, Morgan recruited Philadelphia school teacher Anna Willess Williams to pose for the new design.

      Morgan's obverse features a left-facing portrait of Miss Liberty. The reverse depicts a somewhat scrawny eagle which led some to vilify the coin as a "buzzard dollar." The designer's initial M appears on both sides-a first. It's on the truncation of Liberty's neck and on the ribbon's left loop on the reverse. Mintmarks (O, S, D, and CC) are found below the wreath on the reverse. Points to check for wear on Morgans are the hair above Liberty's eye and ear, the high upper fold of her cap and the crest of the eagle's breast.

       Soon after production began, someone advised the Mint that the eagle should have seven tail feathers, instead of the eight being shown, and Linderman ordered this change. As a result, some 1878 Morgan dollars have eight feathers, some seven-and some show seven over eight. The seven-over-eight variety is the scarcest, though all are fairly common.

       Interest in Morgans was further heightened by the publicity surrounding the 400,000+ dollars found in the basement of Nevada eccentric LaVere Redfield's home. After word leaked out of the amazing cache, several dealers got into the act, each jockeying for position in a scramble that ultimately ended with a Probate Court auction held in January of 1976. At that sale, A-Mark Coins of Los Angeles captured the hoard with a winning bid of $7.3 million. The coins were cooperatively marketed by a number of dealers over a period of several years. Rather than depressing prices, the orderly dispersal of these coins only served to bring more collectors into the Morgan dollar fold. Similarly, the early 1980s witnessed the equally successful distribution of the 1.5 million silver dollars in the Continental Bank hoard.

       Major keys include 1895, 1893-S, 1895-O, 1892-S, 1889-CC, 1884-S and 1879-CC. Mint records show that 12,000 business-strike dollars were made in Philadelphia in 1895, but only proofs are known; the mintage of these is 880. Proofs were made for every year in the series, but only a few brilliant proofs-variously reported at 15 to 24-are known for 1921. Prooflike Morgans also are highly prized and are collected in both Prooflike (PL) and Deep-Mirror Prooflike (DPL or DMPL).

 

   

 

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Fremont Coin Co., Inc. is one of the country's oldest, first-generation coin, currency and bullion dealers in the United States. ANA Life Member #546. Also, Fremont Coin & Currency Co. is one of the largest distributors in the country. log on at: www.fremontcoin.com

Carson City Morgan Dollars from Fremont Coin Co., Inc. www.fremontcoin.com
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