- U.S. Coins /
- Dollars /
- Peace Dollars (1921–1935) /
- Peace Dollar Set $1 1921-1935, 24 Coins MS
Peace Dollar Set $1 1921-1935, 24 Coins MS
1925 $1 MS68 NGC....
Source: Heritage Auctions
1926 $1 MS67 PCGS....
Source: HA
1922 $1 PCGS MS67
Source: David Lawrence Rare Coins
1935 $1 MS67 NGC....
Source: Heritage Auctions
1934 Peace Silver Dollar. MS-67 (PCGS). CAC.
Source: Stacks Bowers
1926-D Peace Silver Dollar. MS-67 (NGC).
Source: Stacks Bowers
1924 $1 NGC MS67 - Registry Quality Gem
Source: David Lawrence Rare Coins
1923 $1 NGC MS67
Source: David Lawrence Rare Coins
1922-D $1 NGC MS67 - Incredible Gem - Registry Quality
Source: David Lawrence Rare Coins
1921 $1 MS67 NGC....
Source: Heritage Auctions
1935-S $1 PCGS MS66
Source: David Lawrence Rare Coins
1934-D $1 NGC MS66 - No Reserve!
Source: David Lawrence Rare Coins
1928 $1 MS66 PCGS....
Source: Heritage Auctions
$1 1927-D PCGS MS66+ CAC
Source: Legend Auctions
1926-S $1 PCGS MS66
Source: David Lawrence Rare Coins
1923-D $1 PCGS/CAC MS66 - Only 2 Finer at PCGS
Source: David Lawrence Rare Coins
1922-S $1 PCGS MS66
Source: David Lawrence Rare Coins
1934-S $1 MS66 PCGS....
Source: Heritage Auctions
1927 $1 MS66 PCGS....
Source: Heritage Auctions
1928-S $1 PCGS MS65
Source: David Lawrence Rare Coins
Greysheet Catalog Details (GSID: 77913)
The Peace dollar, designed by Anthony de Francisci, was minted from 1921 through 1935 and replaced the long-running Morgan dollar. While not nearly as popular as its famous predecessor, the Peace dollar maintains a sizable and loyal base of collectors who find the coin's beauty, relatively short production run, and few expensive key dates attractive attributes.
The scarcest regular-issue Peace dollar is the 1928, which serves as the series key. Meanwhile, the 1934-S is challenging in all grades and relatively rare in upper circulated and uncirculated condition. The 1921 is a scarce first-year coin and the only regular-strike issue in the series boasting a high-relief strike. Various accounts indicate some 35,000 high-relief 1922 Peace dollars were struck but virtually all melted after die breakage problems proved too daunting to overcome. One high-relief 1922 Peace dollar is known in VF, though this may actually be a circulated high-relief proof specimen, of which there are about 10 known specimens. All of these high-relief 1922 Peace dollars trade for high-five and low-six-figure sums.
The most common Peace dollars are circulated low-relief specimens from 1922 and all 1923, 1924, 1925, and 1926 issues. Later issues are better dates. All Peace dollars, including the more-common mid-1920s dates, are exceedingly scarce in grades of MS66 or MS67.
Obverse: Portrait of a crowned Liberty featuring the word LIBERTY at the top periphery. The motto IN GOD WE left of Liberty's neck and TRUST to the right. The date in centered at the bottom.
Reverse: Perched eagle standing on a rock facing the right with UNITED STATES oF AMERICA and E PLURIBUS UNUM at the top periphery. The denomination of ONE DOLLAR left and right of the eagle's tail and the word PEACE at the bottom. Mintmark, if any, appears below the word ONE on the left side.
Catalog Detail
Greysheet & CPG® PRICE GUIDE
Related Stories (powered by Greysheet News)
View all newsAbout CDN Prices
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.
The prices listed in our database are intended to be used as an indication only. Users are strongly encouraged to seek multiple sources of pricing before making a final determination of value. CDN Publishing is not responsible for typographical or database-related errors. Your use of this site indicates full acceptance of these terms.