Investor kit made up of 3 brochures

Get $500 and your FREE investor kit!

American gold eagle coin Request your FREE Precious Metals Investor Kit and we’ll immediately add $500 to your account to help you get started!

The $500 can be used for shipping, insurance charges or IRA custodial fees

Lear does not provide financial advice and is a for profit retailer.
Skip to main content
Back to Top
Speak to a specialist 800-576-9355

SILVER DOLLAR 1795-1798 Draped Bust, Small Eagle

Front - SILVER DOLLAR 1795-1798 Draped Bust, Small Eagle Back - SILVER DOLLAR 1795-1798 Draped Bust, Small Eagle

Description

*Mintage figure of 123,434 does not include a small number of 1798 dollars with the Small Eagle reverse. The 1795 Draped Bust dollar was the first of this design in American coinage. When combined with the small eagle reverse, this coin is the scarcest of early dollars.

In the silver dollar series the obverse motif was continued through pieces dated 1804 (business strikes last made in 1803, however), while the reverse motif was employed through early 1798. The obverse features a portrait of Miss Liberty as just described, with LIBERTY above, the date below, and eight stars to the left and seven to the right. The reverse shows a "small" eagle perched on a cloud within an open wreath. UNITED STATES OF AMERICA surrounds.

Specimens exist in all grades, with those most frequently encountered apt to be in Very Good to Fine preservation. Very Fine pieces can be readily located, Extremely Fine coins are scarcer, and those in AU or better preservation are decidedly rare. A strictly Uncirculated coin would be considered a prime rarity. Examples often show parallel mint-caused adjustment marks. As these coins were produced strictly for utilitarian purposes, no attention was paid to striking them carefully.

Valuation

With a little searching this coin should be easy to find with only those carrying the Uncirculated grade able to fetch a high price from an avid collector.
COIN NAME
SILVER DOLLAR 1795-1798 Draped Bust, Small Eagle
DESIGNED BY
Robert Scot
ISSUE DATE
1795-1798
COMPOSITION
0.8924 part silver, 0.1076 part copper
DIAMETER
39 to 40 mm
WEIGHT
416 grains
EDGE
Lettered HUNDRED CENTS ONE DOLLAR OR UNIT
BUS MINT
123,434 (does not include a small number of 1798 dollars with the Small Eagle reverse.)
PROOF MINT
None

The statements made on this website are opinions only. Past results are no guarantee of future performance or returns. Precious metals, like all investments, carry risk. Precious metals and coins may appreciate, depreciate, or stay the same depending on a variety of factors. Lear Capital, Inc. cannot guarantee, and makes no representation, that any metals purchased will appreciate at all or appreciate sufficiently to make customers a profit. Lear is a retail seller of precious metals and its buyback (or bid) prices are lower than its sell (or ask) prices. Metals must appreciate enough to account for this difference in order for customer to make a profit when liquidating the metals. Lear does not provide financial advice or retirement planning services. The decision to purchase or sell precious metals, and which precious metals to purchase or sell, are the customer’s decision alone, and purchases and sales should be made subject to the customer’s own research, prudence and judgment.