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- 1925 50c Fort Vancouver, DDO, FS-101 MS
1925 50c Fort Vancouver, DDO, FS-101 MS
1925 Fort Vancouver Centennial. MS-68 (NGC).
Source: Stacks Bowers
1925 50C Vancouver MS68 NGC....
Source: HA
1925 50C Vancouver MS68 NGC....
Source: HA
1925 50C Vancouver MS68 PCGS. Three issues, the California, Vancouver, and Vermont commemoratives, were authorized by one p...
Source: HA
1925 50C Vancouver MS68 PCGS. Three issues, the California, Vancouver, and Vermont commemoratives, were authorized by one p...
Source: HA
1925 50C Vancouver MS68 PCGS. Three issues, the California, Vancouver, and Vermont commemoratives, were authorized by one p...
Source: HA
1925 50C Vancouver MS68 PCGS. Three issues, the California, Vancouver, and Vermont commemoratives, were authorized by one p...
Source: HA
1925 50C Vancouver MS68 PCGS....
Source: HA
1925 50C Vancouver MS68 PCGS....
Source: HA
1925 50C Vancouver MS68 PCGS....
Source: HA
1925 50C Vancouver MS68 PCGS....
Source: HA
1925 Fort Vancouver Centennial. MS-68 (NGC).
Source: Stacks Bowers
1925 Fort Vancouver Centennial. MS-68 (NGC).
Source: Stacks Bowers
1925 Fort Vancouver Centennial. MS-68 (NGC).
Source: Stacks Bowers
Vancouver 50c PCGS MS67
Source: David Lawrence Rare Coins
Vancouver 50c PCGS/CAC MS67
Source: David Lawrence Rare Coins
1925 50C Vancouver MS67 PCGS. CAC....
Source: Heritage Auctions
1925 50C Vancouver MS67+ PCGS. CAC....
Source: Heritage Auctions
1925 50C Vancouver MS67 PCGS. The Fort Vancouver Centennial half dollar is infrequently seen in this condition, and just a ...
Source: Heritage Auctions
1925 Vancouver 50c NGC MS67
Source: David Lawrence Rare Coins
Greysheet Catalog Details (GSID: 351878)
The 1925 Vancouver half dollar commemorates the 100th anniversary of the founding of Fort Vancouver in Washington state. The coin was designed by Laura Gardin Fraser and showcases on its obverse a side portrait of John McLoughlin, who built Fort Vancouver on the Columbia River in 1825. The reverse shows a buckskin-clad settler handling a musket, with Fort Vancouver and a mountainous scene anchoring the background. The coin was sold for $1 each.
The coin sold nearly 15,000 pieces -- a relatively strong showing for a coin of rather regional interest. Many are known in circulated grades, but the majority of pieces encountered in the marketplace are in uncirculated grades ranging from MS63 to MS66. Examples grading MS67 or higher are quite scarce.
Catalog Detail
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