![]() This complete first decade collection consists of ALL Philadelphia & Denver Golden Dollars in Uncirculated condition - 20 coins in all! It includes the Key 2008 issue - the lowest mintage P & D coin to date! All coins are encapsulated and presented in a custom box. but only a few million P & D Golden Sacagawea Dollars are issued each year. in 2009 the Mint issued in excess of 30 million Silver Eagles with 2010 numbers on pace for even more. How rare are they? Over 400 Million Presidential Dollars are minted yearly. The Sacagawea-Native American Dollar is #1. The US Mint is currently making 3 yearly dollar coins each year: the Silver Eagle, The Presidential Dollars, and the Golden Sacagawea-Native American Dollar. The US Mint did an about-face and withdrew the release of future issues from circulation late in 2001, but continued producing it each year, creating an opportunity for those that know. even distributed at national retail outlets like Wal-Mart. Released in 2000 the Golden Dollar took the market by storm. ![]() Raised in the Sac and Fox tribe, he was given the native name Wa-Tho-Huk, meaning Bright Path. James Francis Jim Thorpe (1888-1953), was born near Prague, Oklahoma, in what was then Indian Territory. You might find something more valuable than just a dollar.The Sacagawea Dollar has been in circulation for over a decade. The theme of the 2018 Native American 1 Coin design is Jim Thorpe, an athlete and Olympian. Within numismatic circles, these coins which showed “high detail” and enhanced eagle feathers on the reverse side of the coin became known as the “Cheerio Dollars” or “enhanced reverse die.” These are valuable and depending on the grade have sold for $5,000 to $25,000.ĭo you have jars of old coins sitting around? Check out any 2000 Sacagawea dollars and search for enhanced eagle feathers. Some of the gold Sacagawea coins that were found in the Cheerios boxes were struck from a different set of dies. Some lucky Cheerios breakfasters would receive a certificate redeemable for 100 Sacagawea dollars. Remember the days when you’d open a cereal box and get a prize? The partnership with General Mills included 10,000,000 boxes of Cheerios cereal that would contain a Lincoln cent as a prize or a new Sacagawea dollar. Mint embarked upon partnerships with both Wal-Mart and General Mills to promote the use of the Sacagawea coin in commercial transactions. There are a few key dates that are rare and have value beyond the $1 mark on the coin. ![]() The coins still circulate today, but proved to be unpopular with the public and are not widely used. The coins were composed of primary copper (77%), with small portions of zinc, manganese and nickel. They are also not true gold coins, despite the golden color. The 2000-P coins paid to Goodacre were struck on burnished blanks, which created a unique striking for her set.īy and large, the majority of gold Sacagawea coins are not rare and circulated coins do not carry numismatic value. Sculptor Glenna Goodacre’s design was chosen and she was paid a $5,000 commission in the dollar coins. Anthony dollars until the new coins were ready for circulation.Ī design contest was used to select the final representation of Sacagawea with her infant son, with the reverse side of the coin featuring an eagle representing peace and freedom. The act also provided direction to resume production of the Susan B. Treasury’s supply of these coins were dwindling by the late 1990s. Anthony dollars were popular for vending machine use but the U.S. The creation of the new coins were attempting to meet a need for vending machine use. The coin was minted under the auspices of the United States $1 Coin Act of 1997. In the year 2000, the United States Mint honored Sacagawea and her contributions to the early explorations of our great nation with the Sacagawea Golden U.S. Her work as interpreter proved invaluable and also her presence in the group demonstrate the peaceful nature of the mission. Lewis and Clark knew they would need help communicating with the Shoshone tribes at the headwaters of the Missouri River. This translation chain was viewed as extremely valuable. While her husband spoke French, English and Hidatsa. She was bilingual in two very different Native American tribal languages – Hidatsa and Shoshone. Why was Sacagawea chosen to embark upon a journey, carrying her infant son, lasting thousands of miles across desolate and often dangerous land? In 1803 or 1804 she was married to French-Canadian fur trader Toussaint Charbonneau and quickly became pregnant. Sacagawea was born in 1788 or 1789 around the Salmon River region, in current day Idaho. She, of course, was a legendary Native American (Lemhi Shoshone) woman who helped Meriwether Lewis and William Clark on their exploratory expedition from North Dakota across the Rocky Mountains to the Pacific Ocean and back in 1805-1806. Every school child in America grew up learning about Sacagawea.
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