Logo Title
obverse
reverse
Heritage Auctions
Context
Years: 1854–1856
Issuer: United States Issuer flag
Period:
(since 1776)
Currency:
(since 1785)
Total mintage: 1,633,443
Material
Diameter: 15 mm
Weight: 1.67 g
Gold weight: 1.50 g
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 clipboard83
Numista: #23122
Value
Exchange value: 1 USD = $1.00
Bullion value: $249.89

Obverse

Description:
Indian left profile
Inscription:
UNITED STATES OF AMERICA

LIBERTY
Script: Latin

Reverse

Description:
Face value within wreath, date below.
Inscription:
1

DOLLAR

1854
Script: Latin

Edge

Reeded


Mintings

YearMint MarkMintageQualityCollection
1854783,943
18545Proof
1855758,269
185512Proof
1855C9,803
1855D1,811
1855O55,000
1856S24,600

Historical background

In 1854, the United States operated under a complex and fragmented monetary system, a legacy of the Jacksonian era's destruction of the Second Bank of the United States. The federal government coined gold and silver, but the vast majority of money in circulation consisted of paper banknotes issued by hundreds of state-chartered private banks. These notes were of wildly varying reliability, often trading below their face value depending on the perceived solvency of the issuing bank, creating a landscape of financial uncertainty for everyday transactions and interstate commerce. While the Independent Treasury Act of 1846 had established a federal system to handle government funds without using private banks, it did nothing to regulate the broader currency supply, leaving the economy dependent on this unstable patchwork of private paper.

The period was also defined by a de facto shift toward the gold standard. The discovery of vast gold in California after 1848 dramatically increased the nation's gold supply, driving down the market value of gold relative to silver. This triggered the unintended consequence of Gresham's Law: cheaper gold flooded into the U.S. Mint for coinage, while more valuable silver coins were hoarded or exported. As a result, full-weight silver coins, like the Spanish dollar and later the U.S. silver dollar, largely disappeared from circulation, pushing the nation toward a single-metal gold standard in practice, though bimetallism remained the official law.

Politically, the currency question was deeply entwined with the sectional tensions that would lead to the Civil War. Northern commercial interests and Whigs (and later Republicans) generally advocated for a stronger federal role in banking and a uniform national currency to facilitate business and industrialization. In contrast, Southern agrarians and Jacksonian Democrats largely opposed centralized banking power, preferring a decentralized system with easy credit. The legislative battles over a national bank had failed, but the pressures of a growing national economy made the existing system increasingly untenable, setting the stage for the National Banking Acts that would emerge during the Civil War a decade later.

Series: 1854 United States circulation coins

3 Cents obverse
3 Cents reverse
3 Cents
1854-1858
¼ Dollar obverse
¼ Dollar reverse
¼ Dollar
1854-1855
½ Dollar obverse
½ Dollar reverse
½ Dollar
1854-1855
1 Dollar obverse
1 Dollar reverse
1 Dollar
1854-1856
3 Dollars obverse
3 Dollars reverse
3 Dollars
1854-1889
Somewhat Rare