US coinage · denomination

The Gold Dollar: America's Smallest Gold Coin

A speck of gold the width of a fingernail — born in the Gold Rush, killed off as jewelry.

In 1849, the United States minted a gold coin so small you could hide it under a fingertip — half an inch across, lighter than a paperclip. It was the country's answer to a mountain of California gold, and for forty years it carried real money in a tiny package. One of its dates is also among the rarest US coins ever made: a few hundred pieces struck in a Georgia mint that the Confederacy had just seized.

The story behind the coin

In 1848, a carpenter found gold in a California riverbed. Within a year the country was drowning in the stuff — and the US Mint had no good way to turn small amounts of it into spendable money.

Congress fixed that on March 3, 1849. It authorized a one-dollar coin made of gold: a way to monetize the Gold Rush bullion in the smallest useful unit. The result was the tiniest coin the United States would ever strike — just 12.7 mm across, about the width of a fingernail, and weighing only 1.672 grams.

That tininess is the whole story of this coin. It made the gold dollar a marvel of the mint, a magnet for collectors, and — eventually — its own undoing. Forty years later, the coin had become more useful as a charm on a bracelet than as money in a pocket, and the government quietly retired it.

There was an earlier ghost of the idea. Back in 1836, Mint engraver Christian Gobrecht had struck experimental gold dollar patterns — trial coins, never released for spending — with a Liberty cap and rays borrowed from a medal he'd made for the Mint's new steam press. They went nowhere at the time. But they are why this coin's story is sometimes dated to 1836: the dream of a gold dollar was thirteen years older than the coin itself.

The design and who made it

The man who designed the gold dollar had something to prove. James Barton Longacre — a self-taught Pennsylvania engraver who had run away to Philadelphia at twelve and built a career illustrating books — became the Mint's Chief Engraver in 1844. Many of the Mint's senior officers, including Chief Coiner Franklin Peale, doubted he was up to the job and tried to box him out. Longacre did the gold dollar work largely alone, by his own account wanting to "silently reply to those who had questioned my ability."

He ended up designing it three times. The coin went through three distinct types in forty years, and Longacre drew all of them.

Type 1 (1849–1854) shows the obverse — the "heads" side — with a head of Liberty facing left, wearing a coronet reading LIBERTY, ringed by thirteen stars. The reverse (the "tails" side) is a slim wreath of two olive branches wrapping the date and "1 DOLLAR." This is the smallest-diameter version, and the smallest US coin ever made.

Type 2 (1854–1856) is the troublemaker. Longacre enlarged the coin slightly and replaced Liberty with an "Indian princess" in a feathered headdress — a figure he adapted from his own three-dollar gold piece. The relief (how high the design stands off the surface) was too tall for so small a coin. The Mint's presses couldn't push metal into every detail in one blow, so the dates often came out weak — the "85" in 1854 and 1855 is famously mushy. Many were struck poorly, especially at the Southern branch mints, and quietly melted down. Type 2 lasted barely two years.

Type 3 (1856–1889) is Longacre's fix. He kept the princess but made the head larger and the relief shallower, so the design filled in cleanly with a single strike. This third type ran for over thirty years, longer than the other two combined.

Key facts

Years struck (regular issue)
1849–1889
Earliest patterns
1836 (Christian Gobrecht, trial pieces only)
Designer
James Barton Longacre (all three types, obverse and reverse)
Composition
90% gold, 10% copper
Weight
1.672 g (0.04837 troy oz gold)
Diameter
12.7 mm (Type 1); 14.3 mm (Types 2 & 3)
Edge
Reeded
Mints
Philadelphia (no mark), Charlotte (C), Dahlonega (D), New Orleans (O), San Francisco (S)
Total coined
19,499,337 across all mints
Distinction
Smallest US coin ever struck (Type 1, 12.7 mm)
Discontinued
Act of September 26, 1890

Collecting it: key dates, varieties, and why grade matters

A complete date-and-mint set of gold dollars is one of the great challenges in US gold — because the Southern branch mints struck them in tiny numbers, and because some dates barely exist.

The 1861-D is the headline. When the Civil War began in April 1861, Georgia and the Confederacy seized the Dahlonega Mint along with its gold and dies. The rebels struck a small run of gold dollars — estimates run roughly 1,000 to 1,500 pieces, all from a single pair of dies — making the 1861-D the only US gold coin attributable to the Confederate States of America. Perhaps 45 to 80 survive. For collectors, it's not just rare; it's a coin you can hold that was struck by a government that no longer exists.

The 1849-C Open Wreath is the rarest of all. In the first year, Longacre's reverse came in two flavors — an "open wreath" with the wreath tips spaced wide from the "1," and a "closed wreath" with them pulled in tight. At the Charlotte mint, almost everything that year was closed wreath. The open-wreath version is known from only four or five examples. One graded MS62 sold for $1,560,000 on January 19, 2025 — proof that a coin worth one dollar in 1849 can be worth seven figures today.

The 1875 is the Philadelphia prize. By then the coin had no real job in commerce, and the Mint made just 400 business strikes (plus 20 proofs) — the lowest regular-issue mintage of the series. Ironically, because collectors of the day pounced on them, an unusually high share survives.

Other classics to know: the 1856-D and 1860-D (Dahlonega rarities, the 1860-D struck around 1,566 pieces); and the early Type 2 issues (1854–1856), prized precisely because they're so hard to find well struck.

A word on grade. Grade is a coin's condition on a 1-to-70 scale, and for gold dollars it matters more than usual. These coins were soft, thin, and easy to bend, scratch, or solder into jewelry — the very thing that helped kill the denomination. A high-grade gold dollar that escaped a hundred years of pockets and pendants is genuinely scarce, and Type 2 in any grade is tough because the design rarely struck up fully. That's why two coins of the same date can be worlds apart in value.

Questions collectors ask

Why is the gold dollar so small?

It had to hold exactly one dollar's worth of gold and nothing more. At 90% gold, that came to just 1.672 grams — about 0.048 troy ounces — which on a coin means a disc only 12.7 mm across. The Type 1 gold dollar is the smallest coin the US Mint has ever struck.

Who designed the gold dollar?

James Barton Longacre, the Mint's Chief Engraver from 1844 until his death in 1869. He designed all three types — both the obverse (heads) and reverse (tails) of each — and used the project to answer Mint officials who doubted his ability.

What's the difference between Type 1, Type 2, and Type 3?

Type 1 (1849–1854) shows a coronet head of Liberty and is the smallest in diameter. Type 2 (1854–1856) shows an 'Indian princess' in a feathered headdress, was slightly larger, and struck so poorly that it was replaced quickly. Type 3 (1856–1889) keeps the princess but with a larger head and lower relief so it struck cleanly; it ran the longest.

Why is the 1861-D gold dollar so famous?

It is the only US gold coin attributable to the Confederacy. The Dahlonega Mint in Georgia was seized in 1861, and the Confederate authorities struck an estimated 1,000–1,500 gold dollars from a single die pair before the gold ran out. Only a few dozen survive.

What is the rarest gold dollar?

The 1849-C Open Wreath, known from only about four or five examples. An MS62 specimen sold for $1,560,000 in January 2025.

Why did the US stop making gold dollars?

By the 1880s the coin had almost no role in commerce. It was too small to be practical and was used mostly for jewelry and as a low-mintage target for speculators. Mint officials pushed for its abolition, and Congress retired it with the Act of September 26, 1890.

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