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Also, the small California Gold coins and tokens have been made in many locations other than California, often with a claim of being from California on the piece and these items are generally labeled as California Gold Coins or Tokens. Coin-like ingots were produced from 1849 until 1856 in denominations of $1, $5, $10, $20, $25, and $50.
This tiny gold coin is about half the diameter of a dime. Date: ... USA, CALIFORNIA GOLD RUSH, GOLD 1852 ---HALF DOLLAR a: Author: Jerry "Woody" from Edmonton, Canada ...
Art historian Cornelius Vermeule deprecated the Indian princess design used by Longacre for the obverses of the Types 2 and 3 gold dollar, and for the three-dollar piece, "the 'princess' of the gold coins is a banknote engraver's [c] elegant version of folk art of the 1850s. The plumes or feathers are more like the crest of the Prince of Wales ...
English: $1 US "Liberty Head" Gold coin minted at New Orleans, Louisiana (Mint mark "O") in 1852. Date 10 May 2013 (original upload date); 11 May 2013 (last version)
Elizabethtown, California was a California Gold Rush town that began in 1852 in Plumas County, California. It was named after a woman in the miners camp called Elizabeth Stark Blakesley. [2] It is said that the value of gold taken from the Elizabethtown area ran into the millions of dollars.
The 1851 Humbert $50 gold ingot was an Ingot produced by Moffat and Company, under the direction of Augustus Humbert (U.S. Assayer of the treasury) [1] This "coin", while technically an ingot, was still used and unofficially considered currency. It was also the largest ingot produced during the California Gold Rush, weighing almost 2.5 oz.