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Greysheet Catalog Details

The Greysheet Catalog (GSID) of the Morgan Dollars series of Dollars in the U.S. Coins contains 43 distinct entries with CPG® values between $36.45 and $1,035,000.00.
Morgan dollars, officially known as Liberty Head dollars, are among the most popular United States coins. These famous silver dollars were struck from 1878 through 1904 and once more in 1921. They were designed by George T. Morgan, for whom the coin was colloquially renamed by numismatists and others involved with the coin hobby. The Morgan dollar is indisputably one of the most widely collected coins, with many individuals even outside the hobby familiar with Morgan dollars.

The coin`s widespread fame is perhaps in large part due to its association with the Old West, where they widely circulated during the 1880s and 1890s. Morgan dollars were frequently featured in Western films and television shows. It`s therefore no wonder that many Americans fancy thinking of the Morgan dollar as an historic relic of the Old West, oftentimes fancifully linking these large silver coins to busy saloons, dusty towns populated with gun-slinging cowboys, and notorious bank heists executed by outlaws such as Billy the Kid and Butch Cassidy.

There are 96 different date-and-mintmark combinations in the Morgan dollar series, and this does not even count the hundreds of distinct Morgan dollar varieties popularly shorthanded as VAMs, which refer to the initials of two numismatists named Leroy C. Van Allen and A. George Mallis, who began cataloging them in a book they published in 1971.

There are dozens of scarce Morgan dollars, with the 1889-CC and 1893-S serving as the indisputable series keys. All Carson City Morgan dollars are also scarce, as are many issues - even those with large numbers of circulated examples - proving highly difficult in Mint State grades. A relatively small number of Morgan dollars are found with reflective surfaces and categorized as proof-like coins, and an even smaller number of Morgans bear mirror-like surfaces with deep cameo frosting on the devices. These so-called DMPL Morgan dollars, or Deep Mirror Proof-Like Morgans, are among the most desirable of all Morgan dollars and command premiums that are sometimes many multiples in value the price of a regular Mint State Morgan dollar without those characteristics.

Catalog Detail

  Morgan Dollars Value Range Favorite
Morgan Dollars Value Range  
1884 $1 MS
$36.45
-
$72,000
$36.45 - $72,000
1884 $1 GSA Hoard, Soft Package MS
$2,000
-
$2,000
$2,000 - $2,000
1884 $1 Partial E Reverse, VAM-2A MS Hot 50
$81.00
-
$1,230
$81.00 - $1,230
1884 $1 Large Dot, VAM-3 MS Top 100
$63.00
-
$520
$63.00 - $520
1884 $1 Small Dot, VAM-4 MS Top 100
$68.00
-
$618
$68.00 - $618
1884 $1 Doubled Ear, VAM-5 MS Hot 50
-
 
1884 $1 Hair on Jaw, VAM-8D1 MS
-
 
1884 $1 Hair on Jaw, Clashed, VAM-8D2 MS
-
 
1884 $1 Doubled Ear, VAM-22 MS
-
 
1884 $1 MS PL
$68.00
-
$19,200
$68.00 - $19,200
1884 $1 MS DMPL
$228.00
-
$12,000
$228.00 - $12,000
1884-CC $1 MS
$108.00
-
$74,400
$108.00 - $74,400
1884-CC $1 GSA Hoard, Hard package MS
$371
-
$6,750
$371 - $6,750
1884-CC $1 Die Break Left Wreath Top, VAM-3A MS
-
 
1884-CC $1 Spiked Date, VAM-4A MS
$307
-
$6,600
$307 - $6,600
1884-CC $1 MS PL
$358
-
$9,000
$358 - $9,000
1884-CC $1 GSA Hoard, Hard package MS PL
$377
-
$10,800
$377 - $10,800
1884-CC $1 MS DMPL
$429
-
$30,000
$429 - $30,000
1884-CC $1 GSA Hoard, Hard package MS DMPL
-
 
1884-O $1 MS
$36.45
-
$17,300
$36.45 - $17,300
1884-O $1 GSA Hoard MS
$128.00
-
$973
$128.00 - $973
1884-O/O $1 Line on Left, VAM-3 MS
-
 
1884-O $1 Far Date, VAM-5 MS
-
 
1884-O/O $1 VAM-6 MS Top 100
$78.00
-
$585
$78.00 - $585
1884-O $1 Pitted Die ED, VAM-7A MS
-
 
1884-O/O $1 VAM-10 MS Hot 50
$68.00
-
$2,380
$68.00 - $2,380
1884-O $1 Dash Under Date, VAM-18 MS
-
 
1884-O $1 Radial Die Break Reverse , VAM-19A MS
-
 
1884-O $1 Pitted Obverse, VAM-21A MS
-
 
1884-O $1 Date in Denticles, VAM-25 MS Hot 50
$68.00
-
$126.00
$68.00 - $126.00
1884-O $1 Doubled Eyelid, VAM-35 MS Hot 50
$78.00
-
$488
$78.00 - $488
1884-O $1 Doubled 1, VAM-38 MS
-
 
1884-O $1 Doubled Arrows, VAM-39 MS
-
 
1884-O $1 Overlapping Reeds, VAM-42 MS
-
 
1884-O $1 Overlapping Reeds, VAM-42A MS
-
 
1884-O $1 Overlapping Reeds, VAM-42B MS
-
 
1884-O $1 Doubled Ear , VAM-49 MS
-
 
1884-O $1 MS PL
$68.00
-
$9,750
$68.00 - $9,750

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1884-O $1 MS DMPL
$176.00
-
$28,800
$176.00 - $28,800
1884-S $1 MS
$36.45
-
$1,035,000
$36.45 - $1,035,000
1884-S $1 GSA Hoard, Soft Package MS
-
 
1884-S $1 MS PL
$13,200
-
$86,400
$13,200 - $86,400
1884-S $1 MS DMPL
$36,000
-
$57,600
$36,000 - $57,600
       

Greysheet Catalog Details

The Greysheet Catalog (GSID) of the Morgan Dollars series of Dollars in the U.S. Coins contains 43 distinct entries with CPG® values between $36.45 and $1,035,000.00.
Morgan dollars, officially known as Liberty Head dollars, are among the most popular United States coins. These famous silver dollars were struck from 1878 through 1904 and once more in 1921. They were designed by George T. Morgan, for whom the coin was colloquially renamed by numismatists and others involved with the coin hobby. The Morgan dollar is indisputably one of the most widely collected coins, with many individuals even outside the hobby familiar with Morgan dollars.

The coin`s widespread fame is perhaps in large part due to its association with the Old West, where they widely circulated during the 1880s and 1890s. Morgan dollars were frequently featured in Western films and television shows. It`s therefore no wonder that many Americans fancy thinking of the Morgan dollar as an historic relic of the Old West, oftentimes fancifully linking these large silver coins to busy saloons, dusty towns populated with gun-slinging cowboys, and notorious bank heists executed by outlaws such as Billy the Kid and Butch Cassidy.

There are 96 different date-and-mintmark combinations in the Morgan dollar series, and this does not even count the hundreds of distinct Morgan dollar varieties popularly shorthanded as VAMs, which refer to the initials of two numismatists named Leroy C. Van Allen and A. George Mallis, who began cataloging them in a book they published in 1971.

There are dozens of scarce Morgan dollars, with the 1889-CC and 1893-S serving as the indisputable series keys. All Carson City Morgan dollars are also scarce, as are many issues - even those with large numbers of circulated examples - proving highly difficult in Mint State grades. A relatively small number of Morgan dollars are found with reflective surfaces and categorized as proof-like coins, and an even smaller number of Morgans bear mirror-like surfaces with deep cameo frosting on the devices. These so-called DMPL Morgan dollars, or Deep Mirror Proof-Like Morgans, are among the most desirable of all Morgan dollars and command premiums that are sometimes many multiples in value the price of a regular Mint State Morgan dollar without those characteristics.

Catalog Detail