- U.S. Coins /
- 3-Cent Pieces /
- 3-Cent Silver (1851–1872) /
- 1852 3cS MS
1852 3cS MS
1852 3cS PCGS MS67
Source: David Lawrence Rare Coins
1852 3CS MS68 PCGS....
Source: Heritage Auctions
1852 3CS MS68 PCGS....
Source: Heritage Auctions
1852 3CS MS68 PCGS....
Source: Heritage Auctions
1852 3CS MS68 PCGS....
Source: Heritage Auctions
1852 3CS MS68 NGC....
Source: HA
1852 3CS MS68 NGC....
Source: HA
1852 3CS MS68 NGC....
Source: HA
1852 3CS MS68 NGC....
Source: HA
1852 Silver Three-Cent Piece. MS-68 (NGC).
Source: Stacks Bowers
1852 Silver Three-Cent Piece. MS-68 (NGC).
Source: Stacks Bowers
1852 Silver Three-Cent Piece. MS-68 (NGC).
Source: Stacks Bowers
1852 Silver Three-Cent Piece. MS-68 (NGC).
Source: Stacks Bowers
1852 3cS NGC MS67
Source: David Lawrence Rare Coins
1852 3cS NGC MS67
Source: David Lawrence Rare Coins
1852 3CS MS67 PCGS. CAC....
Source: Heritage Auctions
1852 3cS PCGS/CAC MS67 - Registry Gem with Colorful Toning
Source: David Lawrence Rare Coins
1852 3cS PCGS MS67 - Awesome Frosty Gem
Source: David Lawrence Rare Coins
1852 3cS PCGS/CAC MS67
Source: David Lawrence Rare Coins
1852 3cS PCGS MS67
Source: David Lawrence Rare Coins
Greysheet Catalog Details (GSID: 3618)
At a mintage of over 18.6 million, the 1852 is the highest for the Three Cent Silver Series making it the ultimate type coin. Extremely common through MS65, with MS66 being slightly tougher to find. Only MS67's and better would be considered scarce.
Obverse: A six-pointed star with a harp in the center is surrounded by UNITED STATES OF AMERICA on the periphery and the date positioned at the bottom. For the type I issues (1851-53) there is no frame line around the star.
Reverse: The roman numeral III is centered in the design ensconced in a large, bejeweled letter C surrounded by 13 stars on the periphery.
Catalog Detail
Greysheet & CPG® PRICE GUIDE
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All CDN prices are based on proprietary market knowledge and technology developed by CDN Publishing, LLC.
CPG® prices represent retail levels. Collectors should refer to CPG values as a starting place for their negotiations, or auction bid reference.
Greysheet/Greensheet prices are wholesale market levels for collectible coins/paper money intended to indicate what a dealer, or wholesale, buyer would pay for the described item in the specified grade. Greysheet/Greensheet represent "sight-seen" values based on a buyer's in-hand review. The actual value can be more or less than this depending on factors including eye appeal and market timing.
Bluesheet (NGC & PCGS) prices represent the highest sight-unseen offers to buy on dealer networks like CDN Exchange. In many cases, there are no active sight-unseen buy offers, so CDN looks to the recent lowest market values for such an item. For this reason, Bluesheet values typically represent the floor of the market for the specified item. CDN only tracks Bluesheet on certain items.
CAC prices are for U.S. coins that meet the standards of the Certified Acceptance Corporation. You can learn more about CAC on their web site.
Price movement is indicated for price changes in the last 30 days.
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