Logo Title
obverse
reverse
Heritage Auctions
Context
Years: 1875–1891
Issuer: United States Issuer flag
Period:
(since 1776)
Currency:
(since 1785)
Subdivision: 1 Dime = 10 Cents
Total mintage: 142,440,744
Material
Diameter: 17.9 mm
Weight: 2.5 g
Silver weight: 2.25 g
Thickness: 1.05 mm
Shape: Round
Composition: Silver (90% Silver, 10% Copper)
Magnetic: No
Technique: Milled
Alignment: Coin alignment
Obverse
OBVERSE ↑
flip
Reverse
REVERSE ↓
References
KM: #Click to copy to clipboardA92
Numista: #317075
Value
Exchange value: 0.1 USD = $0.10
Bullion value: $6.31

Obverse

Description:
Liberty seated right, cap on pole, shield beside. Country name split around.
Inscription:
UNITED STATES OF AMERICA

1877
Script: Latin

Reverse

Description:
Denomination encircled by a wreath.
Inscription:
ONE

DIME
Script: Latin

Edge

Reeded


Mintings

YearMint MarkMintageQualityCollection
187510,350,000
1875700Proof
1875CC
1875S
187611,460,000
18761,250Proof
1876CC8,270,000
1876S10,420,000
18777,310,000
1877510Proof
1877CC7,700,000
1877S2,340,000
18781,677,200
1878800Proof
1878CC200,000
187914,000
18791,100Proof
188036,000
18801,355Proof
188124,000
1881975Proof
18823,910,000
18821,100Proof
18837,674,673
18831,039Proof
18843,365,505
1884875Proof
1884S564,969
1885S43,690
18852,532,497
1885930Proof
18866,376,684
1886886Proof
1886S206,524
188711,283,229
1887710Proof
1887S4,454,450
1888832Proof
1888S1,720,000
18885,495,655
18897,380,000
1889711Proof
1889S972,678
18909,910,951
1890590Proof
1890S1,423,076
1891S
189115,310,000
1891600Proof
1891O

Historical background

In 1875, the United States stood at a pivotal moment in its monetary history, transitioning from the financial chaos of the Civil War toward a definitive gold standard. The wartime necessity had led to the issuance of "greenbacks"—fiat paper money not backed by gold—and the suspension of specie payments, creating a dual-currency system of depreciated paper and precious metal. This period, known as the "Contraction," was defined by intense political conflict between "hard money" advocates (creditors, industrialists, and Eastern bankers) who demanded a swift return to the gold standard to ensure stable, deflationary currency, and "soft money" proponents (debtors, farmers, and Western interests) who favored retaining or expanding greenbacks to create inflation and ease the repayment of loans.

The political landscape was dominated by the 1873 "Crime of '73," the controversial act that demonetized silver, ending the minting of standard silver dollars and effectively placing the nation on a de facto gold standard. This ignited the growing Silverite movement, which argued that the coining of silver would expand the money supply, assist indebted farmers, and reflect the nation's growing silver production. Thus, by 1875, the currency debate was a three-sided struggle: gold monometallists, silver remonetization forces, and proponents of fiat greenbacks.

Against this backdrop, the Specie Resumption Act of 1875 was the defining legislative achievement, passed by a Republican Congress committed to financial orthodoxy. It set January 1, 1879, as the date for the Treasury to resume redeeming greenbacks for gold at face value, thereby legally committing the nation to a de jure gold standard. The Act also provided for a gradual reduction of greenbacks in circulation, a clause that would later be repealed under political pressure. Consequently, 1875 marked the decisive turn toward gold, setting the stage for the bitter political battles over silver that would dominate the next two decades, culminating in the presidential campaigns of William Jennings Bryan.

Series: 1875 United States circulation coins

20 Cents obverse
20 Cents reverse
20 Cents
1875-1878
1 Dime obverse
1 Dime reverse
1 Dime
1875-1891
¼ Dollar obverse
¼ Dollar reverse
¼ Dollar
1875-1891
½ Dollar obverse
½ Dollar reverse
½ Dollar
1875-1891
🌱 Very Common