1822 25C VG8 Certification #13255850, PCGS #5332
Owner's Comments
B-1, Purchased on Ebay, originally in a blue ANACS holder, one of two varities for the year, with the B2 variety being quite rare, Designed by John Reich.*** Hieroglyphs are deciphered by Thomas Young and Jean-François Champollion, using the Rosetta Stone.*** The Graham Cracker is developed in Bound Brook, New Jersey by the Presbyterian minister Sylvester Graham.*** Ulysses S. Grant, 18th President of the United States and General of the Civil was is born.*** Charles Babbage proposes a Difference engine.
Expert Comments
While 1822 is only one of the “tougher” dates among Large Size Capped Bust 25c, it is arguably the most interesting. Five different 1822-dated obverse dies were produced, but only one was employed for striking 1822 quarters. The others were subsequently over-dated, one for use in 1823, three for 1824. Two of the unused 1824/2 obverses were then over-dated once again for 1825, and the 1823/2 obverse was over-dated once again for 1827. Furthermore, the single obverse die employed for 1822 was mated with three different reverses - the Blundered 25/50 Reverse on the shelf since 1818, the Normal Reverse used to strike most of the 1822 mintage, and then the Broken Arrowhead Reverse T in a newly discovered B.3 die pairing (2017), the reverse that was subsequently used to strike quarters of 1823, 1824, 1825 and 1828. That is quite a family tree for such a simple date.
Currently, the only known example of B.3 is the Discovery Coin, certified in 2017 as AG3 by NGC.
Ron Guth
The 1822 Quarter has a much smaller mintage than that of the previous year, but the 1822 is not known as a particularly scarce date. Two die varieties comprised the entire mintage of this date: one variety is the 25/50C and the other shows a normal denomination. Based on die evidence, researcher and author Steve Tompkins concluded that the Blundered Denomination resulted from a die left over from 1818. The Blundered Denomination appears to be two to three times as scarce as the normal reverse.
Approximately a dozen Mint State examples are known of the Normal Denomination.
PCGS #
5332
Designer
John Reich
Edge
Reeded
Diameter
27.50 millimeters
Weight
6.74 grams
Mintage
64080
Metal
89.2% Silver, 10.8% Copper
Pop Higher
255
Pop Lower
46
Region
The United States of America
Price Guide
PCGS Population
Auctions - PCGS Graded
Auctions - NGC Graded
Rarity and Survival Estimates Learn More
65 or Better | 800 |
All Grades | 13 |
60 or Better | 1 |
65 or Better | R-5.4 |
All Grades | R-9.4 |
60 or Better | R-10.0 |
65 or Better | 7 / 15 TIE |
All Grades | 8 / 15 TIE |
60 or Better | 1 / 15 TIE |
65 or Better | 7 / 24 TIE |
All Grades | 8 / 24 TIE |
60 or Better | 1 / 24 TIE |