1851 $2.50 MS61 Certification #44993981, PCGS #7759
Expert Comments
PCGS Set Registry
Gold flowed from the placer mines of California’s western slope into San Francisco and Sacramento, then onto ships heading east. These shipments either crossed the perilous land route of the Isthmus of Panama (the Canal wouldn't be finished until 1914) or sailed around Cape Horn at the tip of South America, a longer but generally safer passage. Most chose the Panama route, shaving months off the trip.
As the massive amounts of California gold poured into eastern metropolitan centers, the Philadelphia Mint dramatically ramped up production across all five gold coin denominations. The mother mint struck over 7.3 million gold coins, totaling over $52 million in value. The largest portion of the year's total output was comprised of the 1851 Liberty Head Double Eagle and the 1851 Liberty Head Quarter Eagle. In fact, the 1,372,748 mintage of the 1851 Liberty Head Quarter Eagle was the highest mintage of any quarter eagle to date and would only be surpassed by the 1853 issue.
Philadelphia Mint Gold Coin Production in 1851
-
1851 Gold Dollar | Mintage: 41,267
-
1851 Liberty Head Quarter Eagle | Mintage: 1,372,748
-
1851 Liberty Head Half Eagle | Mintage: 377,505
-
1851 Liberty Head Eagle | Mintage: 176,328
-
1851 Liberty Head Double Eagle | Mintage: 2,087,155
PCGS Market Insights
In his landmark 1975 reference, David Akers called the 1851 "the first Liberty Head Quarter Eagle that can be readily obtained in Choice Uncirculated condition, although well-struck Gems are not all that common." Forty years of PCGS grading largely confirms Akers's observation. Well over 300 Mint State coins likely survive, though Gems (MS65 or finer) constitute only approximately 2% of this population. While Gems are scarce for the other so-called common dates of 1852 and 1853, the 1851 appears to be the toughest of the three dates overall in both Mint State and Gem grades.
The Harry W. Bass, Jr. coin (PCGS MS66 #5652480) stood as the sole finest known 1851 Liberty Head Quarter Eagle from the time it was graded (around 2000) until sometime between 2015 and 2018, when PCGS certified a single MS67 example. Overall, the Mint State population of this coin has remained stable since the 2010s.
Rarity and Survival Estimates Learn More
| 65 or Better | 550 |
| All Grades | 250 |
| 60 or Better | 5 |
| 65 or Better | R-5.9 |
| All Grades | R-6.6 |
| 60 or Better | R-9.7 |
| 65 or Better | 112 / 147 TIE |
| All Grades | 116 / 147 TIE |
| 60 or Better | 36 / 147 TIE |
| 65 or Better | 112 / 147 TIE |
| All Grades | 116 / 147 TIE |
| 60 or Better | 36 / 147 TIE |



