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Greysheet & CPG® PRICE GUIDE

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Greysheet Catalog Details

The Greysheet Catalog (GSID) of the Humbert series of Pioneer & Territorial Gold in the U.S. Coins contains 7 distinct entries with CPG® values between $21,000.00 and $720,000.00.
Augustus Humbert, a New York watchcase maker, was appointed United States assayer, and he placed his name and the government stamp on the ingots of gold issued by Moffat & Co. The assay office, a provisional government mint, was a temporary expedient to accommodate the Californians until the establishment of a permanent branch mint. The fifty-dollar gold piece was accepted by most banks and merchants as legal tender on a par with standard U.S. gold coins and was known variously as a slug, quintuple eagle, or five-eagle piece. It was officially termed an ingot.

Catalog Detail

  Humbert Value Range Favorite
Humbert Value Range  
1851 $50 Humbert, Lettered Edge, 880 THOUS, K-2 MS
$78,000
-
$374,400
$78,000 - $374,400
1851 $50 Humbert, Lettered Edge, 880 THOUS, 50 Rev, K-1 MS
$72,000
-
$240,000
$72,000 - $240,000
1851 $50 Humbert, Lettered Edge, 887 THOUS, K-4a MS
-
 
1851 $50 Humbert, Lettered Edge, 887 THOUS, 50 Rev, K-4 MS
$57,600
-
$720,000
$57,600 - $720,000
1851 $50 Humbert, Reeded Edge, 880 THOUS, K-5 MS
$28,800
-
$240,000
$28,800 - $240,000
1851 $50 R Humbert, Reeded Edge, 887 THOUS, K-6 MS
$21,000
-
$516,000
$21,000 - $516,000
1851 $50 R Humbert, 880 THOUS PR
-
 

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Greysheet Catalog Details

The Greysheet Catalog (GSID) of the Humbert series of Pioneer & Territorial Gold in the U.S. Coins contains 7 distinct entries with CPG® values between $21,000.00 and $720,000.00.
Augustus Humbert, a New York watchcase maker, was appointed United States assayer, and he placed his name and the government stamp on the ingots of gold issued by Moffat & Co. The assay office, a provisional government mint, was a temporary expedient to accommodate the Californians until the establishment of a permanent branch mint. The fifty-dollar gold piece was accepted by most banks and merchants as legal tender on a par with standard U.S. gold coins and was known variously as a slug, quintuple eagle, or five-eagle piece. It was officially termed an ingot.

Catalog Detail