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ICG Grades and Encapsulates First Sacagawea Dollar on December 21,
1999
Coin Scheduled for Public Release in March 2000
Grades MS-65 by ICG
ICG—Independent
Coin Grading of Englewood, Colorado—graded and encapsulated on December
21, 1999 what is believed to be the first Sacagawea dollar coin
to have unofficially gotten outside the Mint. The dollar coin, which
is golden in color with a copper hue along its plain edge, was graded
by ICG more than two months before its scheduled release to the
public in early March 2000. ICG graded the coin MS-65.
According
to Keith Love, ICG’s Founder and President, "The Sacagawea coin
arrived at ICG this morning (Tuesday, December 21, 1999). You can
imagine the surprise and the excitement of all of us when the coin
was brought into the grading room."
"The
ICG graders unanimously graded it MS-65. The coin was then put into
a holder, with the date it was certified by ICG printed on the holder,
photographed, and then given to CSS, the third-party receiving company,
so it could immediately return the coin to its owner."
Love
continued, "The real issue is trust. The owner of this Sacagawa
Dollar had a choice in third-party grading services and felt with
ICG certification there would be no doubt about this coin being
recognized as the first Sacagewa Dollar that was in circulation
in 1999."
The
coin’s obverse was designed by Glenna Goodacre and features the
imagined likeness of Sacagawea, the Shoshone woman who accompanied
Lewis and Clark on their trek to the Pacific from St. Louis (1804-06).
On Sacagawea’s back is her baby son who was born during the exploration.
The reverse depicts a soaring eagle and 17 stars, one for each of
the states at the time of the Lewis and Clark expedition. The designer
of the reverse is Thomas Rogers Sr., a Sculptor-Engraver at the
U.S. Mint.
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