Logo Title
obverse
reverse
Münzkabinett Berlin CC0
Context
Years: 1866–1907
Issuer: United States Issuer flag
Period:
(since 1776)
Currency:
(since 1785)
Total mintage: 37,395,154
Material
Diameter: 27 mm
Weight: 16.72 g
Gold weight: 15.05 g
Thickness: 2 mm
Shape: Round
Composition: Gold (90% Gold, 10% Copper)
Magnetic: No
Technique: Milled
Alignment: Coin alignment
Obverse
OBVERSE ↑
flip
Reverse
REVERSE ↓
References
KM: #Click to copy to clipboard102
Numista: #16134
Value
Exchange value: 10 USD = $10.00
Bullion value: $2501.85

Obverse

Description:
Liberty left, coronet head, 13 stars, date below.
Inscription:
LIBERTY

1901
Script: Latin

Reverse

Description:
American eagle with shield, clutching arrows and olive branch, motto overhead.
Inscription:
UNITED STATES OF AMERICA

IN GOD WE TRUST

· TEN D. ·
Script: Latin

Edge

Reeded


Mintings

YearMint MarkMintageQualityCollection
18663,750
186630Proof
1866S11,500
18673,090
186750Proof
1867S9,000
186825Proof
1868S13,500
186810,630
18691,830
186925Proof
1869S6,430
18704,990
1870S8,000
187035Proof
1870CC5,908
18711,790
187130Proof
1871CC8,085
1871S16,500
18721,620
187230Proof
1872CC4,600
1872S17,300
1873CC4,543
1873S12,000
1873800
187325Proof
1874CC16,767
1874S10,000
187453,140
187420Proof
1875100
1875CC7,715
187520Proof
1876687
187645Proof
1876CC4,696
1876S5,000
1877797
187720Proof
1877CC3,332
1877S17,000
187873,780
187820Proof
1878CC3,244
1878S26,100
1879384,740
1879O1,500
1879S224,000
187930Proof
1879CC1,762
1880CC11,190
1880O9,200
188036Proof
1880S506,250
18801,644,840
188140Proof
1881CC24,015
1881O8,350
1881S970,000
18813,877,220
18822,324,440
1882O10,820
1882S132,000
188240Proof
1882CC6,764
1883CC12,000
1883O800
1883S38,000
188340Proof
1883208,700
1884S124,250
188445Proof
1884CC9,925
188476,860
188565Proof
1885253,462
1885S228,000
1886236,160
188660Proof
1886S826,000
188753,600
188780Proof
1887S817,000
1888132,921
188875Proof
1888O21,335
1888S648,700
18894,440
188945Proof
1889S425,400
189057,980
189063Proof
1890CC17,500
189191,820
189148Proof
1891CC103,732
1892O28,688
1892S115,500
1892797,480
189272Proof
1892CC40,000
189355Proof
1893CC14,000
1893O17,000
1893S141,350
18931,840,840
18942,470,735
189443Proof
1894O107,500
1894S25,000
1895567,770
189556Proof
1895O98,000
1895S49,000
189676,270
189678Proof
1896S123,750
189769Proof
1897O42,500
1897S234,750
18971,000,090
1898S473,600
1898812,130
189867Proof
18991,262,219
189986Proof
1899O37,047
1899S841,000
1900120Proof
1900S81,000
1900293,840
19011,718,740
190185Proof
1901O72,041
1901S2,812,750
190282,400
1902113Proof
1902S469,500
1903S538,000
190396Proof
1903O112,771
1903125,830
1904108Proof
1904161,930
1904O108,950
1905200,992
190586Proof
1905S369,250
1906165,420
190677Proof
1906D981,000
1906O86,895
1906S457,000
19071,203,899
190774Proof
1907D1,030,000
1907S210,500

Historical background

In 1866, the United States was grappling with the profound monetary consequences of the Civil War, which had ended just a year earlier. The federal government had financed the conflict not only through taxes and bonds but also by issuing over $450 million in "greenbacks"—paper notes declared legal tender but not redeemable in gold or silver. This created a dual-currency system: gold-backed money and a fluctuating paper currency. The greenbacks had depreciated significantly against gold during the war, leading to price inflation and a contentious debate between "hard money" advocates (who wanted a swift return to the gold standard) and "soft money" proponents (who favored retaining or even expanding the paper currency to aid debtors and foster economic growth).

Politically, the battle over currency was crystallizing in Congress. Hard money interests, led by Secretary of the Treasury Hugh McCulloch, were in the ascendant. McCulloch championed a policy of contraction, aiming to gradually retire the greenbacks from circulation to restore the nation's pre-war gold standard and stabilize the dollar. This policy was aligned with commercial and banking interests in the Northeast but was fiercely opposed by farmers, manufacturers, and many in the Midwest and South who feared that reducing the money supply would cause deflation, lower crop prices, and make it harder to pay off war-incurred debts.

The year proved pivotal for the contractionists. In April 1866, Congress passed the Contraction Act, authorizing the Treasury to retire up to $10 million of greenbacks within six months and up to $4 million per month thereafter. This legislative victory for the gold standard set the nation on a path toward the "Resumption" of specie payments, which would ultimately be achieved in 1879. However, the act also intensified regional and class divisions over money, sparking a political backlash that would fuel the Greenback movement of the 1870s. Thus, 1866 stands as a defining moment where the U.S. government decisively, though controversially, chose a path of monetary contraction in the difficult postwar transition.

Series: 1866 United States circulation coins

1 Dollar obverse
1 Dollar reverse
1 Dollar
1866-1873
5 Dollars obverse
5 Dollars reverse
5 Dollars
1866-1908
10 Dollars obverse
10 Dollars reverse
10 Dollars
1866-1907
20 Dollars obverse
20 Dollars reverse
20 Dollars
1866-1876
5 Cents obverse
5 Cents reverse
5 Cents
1866-1867
¼ Dollar obverse
¼ Dollar reverse
¼ Dollar
1866-1873
½ Dollar obverse
½ Dollar reverse
½ Dollar
1866-1873
🌱 Common