View All U.S. Centennial Exposition (1876)

1876 So-Called Dollar HK-39, Independence Hall Dollar

Strike Type

Coin Details

Year
1876
Denomination
So-Called Dollars
Strike Type
Regular Strike
Series
National Commemorative & Expo So-Called Dollars
Composition
N/A
Diameter
38mm

Description

HK-39 is a 1876 so-called dollar commemorating Independence Hall. The Women's Pavilion was the first building at any international exposition funded, designed, managed, and filled entirely by women, showcasing female inventors, artists, and entrepreneurs from across the nation. This bronze so-called dollar represents the standard commemorative medal composition of its era. Bronze pieces were often the primary production run, with silver reserved for presentation copies and white metal for budget editions. The U.S. Mint struck official Centennial medals designed by William Barber, while private firms produced hundreds of additional varieties. The Centennial group is the largest in the HK catalog. William Barber designed the official U.S. Mint medals for the 1876 Centennial Exposition, establishing the standard for American exposition medal artistry. The Hibler-Kappen catalog, first published in 1963 by Harold E. Hibler and Charles V. Kappen, systematically organized American so-called dollars for the first time, assigning HK numbers that remain the standard reference today.

Rarity Notes

HK-39 is scarce in the numismatic market. Production quantities for post-Civil War era commemorative medals were typically modest, and survival rates vary significantly based on the original distribution method and the material's durability.

Cross References

HK-39; PCGS #642103; NGC #850093

External References

Error Varieties

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