1 Dollar "Trade Dollar" obverse1 Dollar "Trade Dollar" reverse
United States

1 Dollar "Trade Dollar" · “Trade Dollar

United States · 1873–1885 · Silver

Every listing identified by its certification barcode — a verifiable fact, not a guess.

The coin

The story

The Trade Dollar: a U.S. coin made to win Asia, then disowned at home

In 1876 the United States did something it had never done before and has never done since: it told Americans that a coin still in their pockets was no longer money. That coin was the Trade Dollar — built to beat the Mexican peso in the markets of China, and then abandoned by the country that minted it.

Catalogue

Issuer
United States
Years
1873–1885
Metal
Silver
All United States series

The story behind the coin

By the early 1870s the United States had a glut of silver and a problem with where to spend it. New strikes in the American West — the Comstock Lode above all — were pulling silver out of the ground faster than the country could use it, and the price was sliding. Meanwhile, on the other side of the Pacific, a different silver coin ruled the wharves of Canton and Shanghai: the Mexican peso, descendant of the old Spanish dollar, the coin Chinese merchants trusted by weight and habit.

The idea was simple and a little audacious. If American silver could be struck into a coin Chinese merchants would accept instead of the peso, the West's silver would have a buyer and U.S. trade in the East would have a foothold. Congress agreed, and the Coinage Act of 1873 authorized the Trade Dollar — a coin designed not to circulate in America at all, but to be exported, sold to merchants, and shipped across the ocean as bullion you could count.

To make the pitch, the Mint did something telling: it made the Trade Dollar heavier than a regular silver dollar. It carried 420 grains of standard silver against the 412.5 of the ordinary dollar — and it said so, right on the coin. The reverse is stamped 420 GRAINS, 900 FINE. This was a coin that advertised its own silver content to a buyer half a world away who cared about exactly one thing: how much metal was really there.

Then the plan went sideways. Silver kept falling. By the late 1870s the bullion in a Trade Dollar was worth less than a dollar, and the coins began drifting back from the docks into American commerce — used at face value by people who had no idea they were holding what Washington now considered a leftover. Congress's response, in an act of July 22, 1876, was to demonetize the coin: strip it of legal-tender status entirely. (It had carried a five-dollar legal-tender ceiling to begin with, the result of a drafting quirk; 1876 removed even that.) The Mint kept making them for export through 1878, then stopped striking them for circulation altogether.

The design — and who made it

Both sides of the Trade Dollar came from William Barber, the Mint's Chief Engraver, and they read like a sales brochure for American silver.

The obverse — the heads side — shows Liberty seated, but not the familiar Seated Liberty of the era's other coins. She faces left, toward a stylized sea, perched on a bale of merchandise with a sheaf of wheat behind her. In one hand she holds an olive branch; the other extends a ribbon reading LIBERTY. The whole scene is an argument: here is American abundance, American commerce, facing west across the Pacific toward its new market.

The reverse carries a bald eagle clutching three arrows in one talon and an olive branch in the other — and, unusually, the arrangement is flipped from the other U.S. silver coins of the day. Around it run the inscriptions that mattered most to the coin's actual job: UNITED STATES OF AMERICA, TRADE DOLLAR, and the bullion guarantee, 420 GRAINS, 900 FINE. The edge is reeded; the coin is broad and substantial at 38.1 mm across and 27.2 grams in hand.

A small detail rewards a close look. Partway through the run the Mint quietly reworked both dies, and collectors split the coin into a Type I and Type II obverse and reverse. The easiest tell is on the reverse: the early (Type I) die has a tiny berry below the eagle's claw, and the later (Type II) die does not. Liberty's extended hand changed too — the later obverse adds a fourth visible finger. These look like trivia until you realize they let collectors date the exact moment, in 1875 and 1876, when the Mint was fine-tuning a coin it was still betting on.

William Barber himself was an Englishman — born in London in 1807 — who came to America and rose to Chief Engraver in 1869, succeeding James B. Longacre. The Trade Dollar and the short-lived Twenty-Cent Piece are his best-known regular issues. When he died in 1879, his son Charles E. Barber took the post and went on to design the coins that still carry the family name.

Key facts

Collecting it — key dates, varieties, and why grade matters

The Trade Dollar is a series where the story and the scarcity line up, which is exactly what makes collectors chase it.

The famous proofs. The two most legendary dates aren't circulation coins at all. By 1879 the Mint had stopped striking Trade Dollars for export and was making them only as proofs — specially struck, mirror-finish coins for collectors — through 1883. Then come the 1884 and 1885 proofs, which appear in no Mint production records and only surfaced years later. About ten of the 1884 are known and only five of the 1885. They were almost certainly struck quietly inside the Philadelphia Mint and slipped out privately. Collectors tell a story — often repeated, never fully documented — tracing them to a well-connected Philadelphia coin dealer named William Idler. Treat that as the traditional account rather than settled fact; what is settled is that these are among the most coveted U.S. silver coins in existence, and a single 1885 has sold for a seven-figure sum.

The key business strike. Among coins actually meant to circulate, the prize is the 1878-CC from Carson City — roughly 97,000 struck, and a large share melted before they ever left the Mint, which is why survivors are genuinely scarce in any grade and very rare in high grade.

The varieties. The Type I and Type II obverse/reverse dies (the berry-below-the-claw tell on the reverse, the finger count on the obverse) create combinations collectors hunt date by date — including a scarce 1876 "transitional" pairing and well-known oddities like the 1875-S over CC and the 1876-CC doubled die reverse.

Chopmarks. Many surviving Trade Dollars carry chopmarks — small punches that Chinese and other Asian merchants stamped into the silver to vouch that they'd checked the metal and it was good. For a century collectors saw chopmarks as damage. Today the major grading services certify chopmarked coins as their own category, because each one is physical proof the coin did the job it was made for: it crossed the Pacific and passed through real hands in real markets.

Why high grades are scarce. This was working money in two senses. The coins that stayed home circulated, and the coins that went abroad were weighed, stacked, and chopped. On top of that, the redemption of 1887 — Congress gave holders six months to turn Trade Dollars in — pulled millions of coins out of circulation to be melted and recoined, much of it into Morgan Dollars. Of roughly $36 million face value struck, somewhere around $7.6 million came back to be destroyed. A coin that survived all of that and stayed sharp and lustrous is a small miracle, which is why condition drives Trade Dollar prices as sharply as date does.

Questions collectors ask

Sources