Home (Type One)
Home  
 
 
Home » Numismatic » Type One


 

Type One

Numismatic Type collectingType One Buffalo

The rarest Type One gold dollar from the Dahlonega Mint. The 1854-D has the lowest mintage of any Dahlonega Type One gold dollar. All specimens have large, raised die striations on the reverse left of the mintmark.

 


Type One Term for any coin from the first Type within a Series.
Type One Buffalo A 1913-dated Indian Head five-cent coin with the reverse buffalo (bison) on a raised mound.

Type One: Young Head
All basically have the Young Head portrait of the Queen on the obverse, with a ONE SHILLING design as for William IV on the reverse.

Type One gold dollar
The Liberty Head design gold dollar struck from 1849 until mid-1854 in Philadelphia and for the full year in Dahlonega and San Francisco.
Type One nickel ...

Type One Nickel
The Jefferson Head five-cent coin struck from 1938 until mid-1942 and from 1946 until today. Also may refer to the Type One Buffalo nickel.
Type One Quarter ...

SUB-TYPE ONE - "FIVE CENTS" ON MOUND (1913 ONLY)
Date
Mintage for
Circulation ...

Type One with a beaded inner circle on the reverse minted approx 50 coins before a die crack appeared at 12 o'clock rendering the die useless.

Type One quarter
The Standing Liberty quarter struck from 1916 to mid-1917. This design features a bare-breasted Miss Liberty, a simple head detail, and no stars under the reverse eagle.
Type One twenty ...

1854 type one, type two gold dollars
1856 type two, type three gold dollars
1795 small eagle, heraldic eagle $5.00 gold (very tough) ...

T1 and T2 - Type one and Type two - (also expressed as Type I or T1 and Type II or T2) Used to denote a variation in the design on two coins with the same design.

Buffalo Nickel (Type One) - Business Strike
Buffalo Nickel (Type Two) - Business Strike
Buffalo Nickel - Matte Proof ...

Type One Double Eagle: A United States twenty dollar gold piece struck at either the Philadelphia, New Orleans or San Francisco mints between 1850 and 1866.

Unless you are a Type One double eagle specialist, you probably are not aware of the fact that the 1854-S is a scarce and much undervalued issue in all grades.

At the bottom of the bust the harp appears to bow outward close to a letter of the legend, on type one examples this bow is usually at the O in FLOREAT. Also the round head on the harp is usually in line with the letter E.

Type One (1916­1917) featured Liberty on the obverse and an American eagle in flight on the reverse.

Type One without the Motto "In Good We Trust" from 1849 to 1866. Type two with the Motto "In Good We Trust" from 1866 to 1876. With type three Chief Engraver William Barber replaced the denomination TWENTY D.

Imitation miliaresion with prototype one of Basil II and Constantine VIII (976-1025). Probably minted under Price Mstislav Vladimirovic until 1024. The reverse letters of the prototype have been reproduced as square dots.

Coins can be broadstruck on either type one or type two planchets. When a coin is broadstruck the blank being fed into the collar will spread and distort outward as it is being struck because the collar isn't in the correct position to retain it.

Certain reverse types of Roman coins were popular and used by a number of different emperors at a wide range of mints with the IOVI CONSERVATORI type one such style.

(Blank planchet is easier understood than a blank blank. Besides, you might think I'm cursing.) There are two types: one which has been freshly cut in the blanking press (Type One), ...

Unfortunately it is often difficult to tell which type one is dealing with. We suspect that the following two coins fall into the local coinage category as they are far too crude to fool anyone used to the official issues.

See also: Coin, Reverse, Revers, Dollar, Obverse