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$1 2019 S Sacagawea Mary Ross - ER 10-Coin Silver Proof Set
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United States
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$1 2019 S Sacagawea Mary Golda Ross First Releases
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United States
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$1 2019 S Sacagawea Mary Ross-First Releases 10-Coin Clad Proof Set
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United States
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$1 2018 S SACAGAWEA Jim Thorpe First Releases
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United States
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$1 2020 S Sacagawea Anti-Discrimination Law First Releases
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The laws enforced by EEOC makes it unlawful for Federal agencies to discriminate against employees and job applicants on the bases of race, color, religion, sex, national origin, disability, or age. A person who files a complaint or participates in an investigation of an EEO complaint, or who opposes an employment practice made illegal under any of the laws that EEOC enforces is protected from retaliation.
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$1 2018 S SACAGAWEA Jim Thorpe Early Releases
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The obverse design retains the central figure of the Sacagawea design first produced in 2000 with the inscriptions LIBERTY and IN GOD WE TRUST. The reverse design changes each year to honor an important contribution of Indian tribes or individual Native Americans with the inscriptions $1 and UNITED STATES OF AMERICA. Reverse designs for the Native American $1 Coin are selected by the Secretary of the Treasury after consulting with the U.S. Senate Committee on Indian Affairs, the Congressional Native American Caucus of the U.S. House of Representatives, the Commission of Fine Arts and the National Congress of American Indians, and after public review by the Citizens Coinage Advisory Committee. Like Presidential $1 Coins, Native American $1 Coins have a distinctive edge, are golden in color, and feature edge-lettering of the year, mint mark and E PLURIBUS UNUM. In 2009, the United States Mint began minting and issuing $1 coins featuring designs celebrating the important contributions made by Indian tribes and individual Native Americans to the history and development of the United States. The Native American $1 Coin Program is authorized by the Native American $1 Coin Act. In celebration of the San Francisco Mint’s 50th anniversary producing United States Mint proof coinage. U.S. Mint is proud to offer this silver reverse proof coin.
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$1 2012 S Sacagawea 17th Century Trade Routes
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United States
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$1 2019 S Sacagawea Mary Golda Ross
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In 1958, a woman stumped the panelists on the game show “What’s My Line?” When they finally discovered what she did, the show’s host admitted that he, himself, was surprised by her occupation.
Who was Mary G. Ross? She was another 'hidden figure,' a mathematician and engineer whose role in America's space age is largely unknown. Her life's work is celebrated in the August 9, 2018, Google Doodle.
Born in 1908, Ross was a Native American and member of the Cherokee Nation. After earning a master's degree in 1938, she eventually moved to California in 1941, where landed a job as a mathematician at Lockheed, working on the P-38 Lightning fighter plane. She worked her way up the ranks at Lockheed and become the only woman among on the original team at Skunk Works.
As a mathematician and engineer, she wrote a number of professional and theoretical works and was one of the authors of the NASA Planetary Flight Handbook Vol. III, about space travel to Mars and Venus.
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$1 2017 S SACAGAWEA SEQUOYAH
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After 8 years of the Sacagawea Dollars, the United States Mint began to try new designs. Thus, came the Native American Dollar Coins. One thing that you can note about the new designs is that there is no longer a date or a mint mark visible on the dollar. Instead, the date and mint mark appear on the edge.
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$1 2015 S SACAGAWEA MOHAWK IRONWORKERS EARLY RELEASES
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NGC PF 70 ULTRA CAMEO
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The Sacagawea Native American dollar was authorized to be redesigned in the Native American $1 Coin Act, passed in 2007. The act called for the one dollar coin to be redesigned to depict "images celebrating the important contributions made by Indian tribes and individual Native Americans to the development of the United States..." The redesigned Native American Dollars kept the obverse design largely intact, although the date and inscription E PLURIBUS UNUM were moved to the edge of the coin.
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$1 2009 S SACAGAWEA AGRICULTURE
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The Sacagawea dollar (also known as the "golden dollar") is a United States dollar coin introduced in 2000, although not minted for general circulation between 2002 to 2008 and again from 2012 onward because of its general unpopularity with the public and low business demand for the coin. These coins have a copper core clad by manganese brass, giving them a distinctive golden color. The coin features an obverse by Glenna Goodacre. From 2000 to 2008, the reverse featured an eagle design by Thomas D. Rogers. Since 2009, the reverse of the Sacagawea dollar has been changed yearly, with each design in the series depicting a different aspect of Native American cultures. These coins are marketed as "Native American dollars".
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$1 2013 S SACAGAWEA TREATY WITH THE DELAWARES
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The 2013-S Proof Native American Dollar had a new reverse design this year. The reverse design represents the Delaware Treaty of 1778. The obverse design remained the same as in previous years featuring Sacagawea and her son John Baptiste.
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$1 2007 S SACAGAWEA
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USA Coin Book Estimated Value of 2007-S Native American & Sacagawea Dollar (Proof Coin) is Worth $16 or more.
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United States
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$1 2008 S SACAGAWEA
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USA Coin Book Estimated Value of 2008-S Native American & Sacagawea Dollar (Proof Coin) is Worth $16 or more.
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United States
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$1 2012 S Sacagawea 17th Century Trade Routes
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NGC PF 70 ULTRA CAMEO
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United States
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$1 2012 S Sacagawea 17th Century Trade Routes
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United States
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$1 2012 S Sacagawea 17th Century Trade Routes
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NGC PF 70 ULTRA CAMEO
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The 2012 Sacagawea or Native American Dollar (Buy on eBay) experienced a significant drop in mintage levels as a result of the legislative tie to the Presidential Dollars Program.
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$1 2010 S SACAGAWEA GREAT LAW OF PEACE
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NGC PF 70 ULTRA CAMEO
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After experiencing many years of limited production, the $1 coins featuring Sacagawea underwent somewhat of a rebirth. The 2010 Sacagawea Dollar (Buy on eBay) was the second year of an ongoing series of annually rotating reverse designs celebrating the accomplishments and contributions of Native Americans. Officially called Native American Dollars, the coins were minted in much larger quantities following the new legislative requirements.
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$1 2016 S SACAGAWEA WARTIME CODE TALKERS EARLY RELEASES
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The Native American dollar has a special enhanced finish, the third year the US mint used this finish on a Sacagawea dollar. This set honors contributions of the Native American Code Talkers during World Wars I and II.
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$1 2018 S Sacagawea Jim Thorpe-First Day Silver Reverse Proof Set
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NGC RP 70
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The obverse design retains the central figure of the Sacagawea design first produced in 2000 with the inscriptions LIBERTY and IN GOD WE TRUST. The reverse design changes each year to honor an important contribution of Indian tribes or individual Native Americans with the inscriptions $1 and UNITED STATES OF AMERICA. Reverse designs for the Native American $1 Coin are selected by the Secretary of the Treasury after consulting with the U.S. Senate Committee on Indian Affairs, the Congressional Native American Caucus of the U.S. House of Representatives, the Commission of Fine Arts and the National Congress of American Indians, and after public review by the Citizens Coinage Advisory Committee. Like Presidential $1 Coins, Native American $1 Coins have a distinctive edge, are golden in color, and feature edge-lettering of the year, mint mark and E PLURIBUS UNUM. In 2009, the United States Mint began minting and issuing $1 coins featuring designs celebrating the important contributions made by Indian tribes and individual Native Americans to the history and development of the United States. The Native American $1 Coin Program is authorized by the Native American $1 Coin Act. In celebration of the San Francisco Mint’s 50th anniversary producing United States Mint proof coinage. U.S. Mint is proud to offer this silver reverse proof coin.
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$1 2014 S SACAGAWEA NATIVE HOSPITALITY
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The reverse of the 2014 Native American Sacagawea Dollar was designed by Chris Costello and sculpted by Joseph Menna. The design commemorates how Native American hospitality ensured the success of the Lewis and Clark Expedition. The design features a Native American man offering a pipe, while his wife offers provisions of fish, corn, roots, and gourds. In the background is a stylized image of the
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CANADA - 1968 TO DATE
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S$50 2016 WANDUTA COLORIZED-EARLY RELEASES
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NGC PF 70 ULTRA CAMEO
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Wanduta, a Sioux Valley Dakota Chief is featured on the latest Canadian five-ounce coloured coin. The coin celebrates equality under the law which is sometimes very difficult to attain even after decades of struggle.
A law introduced in 1895 prohibited aboriginal ceremonies which led to the arrest of many. They were penalised for simply following their traditions like celebrating festivals, dances, and ceremonies. This tribe settled in Oak River, Manitoba in 1875 and performed “give-away dances” or the “grass dance” when they exchanged blankets and horses. The dance has a lot of significance for the tribe politically, economically, and socially.
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PALAU
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S$5 2015 TIWANAKU COLORIZED-EARLY RELEASES
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S$1 2019 JAMUL NATION APOLLO 11 MOON LANDING 50th ANNIVERSARY
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On July 16, 1969, astronauts Neil Armstrong, Buzz Aldrin and Michael Collins lifted off from Launch Pad 39A at NASA’s Kennedy Space Center in Florida on a journey to the Moon and into history. Four days later, while Collins orbited the Moon in the command module, Armstrong and Aldrin landed Apollo 11’s lunar module, Eagle, on the Moon’s Sea of Tranquility, becoming the first humans to set foot on the lunar surface.
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S$1 2016 JAMUL NATION APACHE TRIBE ARIZONA RATTLESNAKE
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Apache Tribe of Arizona showing the fierce visage of Geronimo, legendary war chief of the Apaches.
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S$1 2016 JAMUL NATION SEMINOLE TRIBE FLORIDA ALLIGATOR
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Today, the vast majority of the Seminole nation is in Oklahoma, but that was not always the case. A small minority remains in Florida, where the tribe originated. The vast difference in location is a result of the infamous Trail of Tears, the path that an estimated 100,000 Native Americans traveled when they were forcibly removed from the their native lands in the American Southeast. Experts estimate that 15,000 people died during the arduous journey. In spite of the displacement, a portion of Seminoles remained in Florida, where they are today honored by having the Florida State athletics teams named after them.
The reverse of the coin features the animal from which Florida State’s main rival, the University of Florida, takes its teams’ name, an alligator. The fierce predator that is home to Florida’s swamps and the Everglades is shown with its mouth open, either snapping at a would-be predator or hoping to catch its nest meal. Among the inscriptions on this face is “JAMUL SOVEREIGN NATION,” the home of the Native American Mint. That is where Native American Dollars are manufactured.
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S$1 2017 JAMUL NATION OJIBWA TRIBE MICHIGAN SWAN
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Ojibwa Tribe of Michigan showing Arrow Maker, an essential skill and each Brave has a distinctive arrow.
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S$1 2017 JAMUL NATION MIAMI TRIBE INDIANA MINK
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Miami Tribe of Indiana featuring a portrait of Little Turtle who led his people against White incursion in the 1790s.
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S$1 2017 JAMUL NATION HAWAIIANS TRIBE HAWAII MONK SEAL
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When many of us think about Native Americans, typically tribes like the Seminole and Comanche come to mind. There were a large number of diverse Native American tribes that inhabited this area before it became the United States. However, Native Hawaiians are also Native Americans.
This silver proof features a design paying tribute to Native Hawaiians and their culture. It was struck by the Native American Mint and issued in 2017. It’s actually just one design of an entire series issued by various Native American tribes. Each design in the series depicts a member of the respective tribe on one side and an animal that was important to the tribe on the other.
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S$1 2017 JAMUL NATION NATCHEZ TRIBE LOUISIANA BLACK BEAR
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The Natchez people lived in the Lower Mississippi Valley near what is today a town that bears their name. They are particularly notable because the language that they spoke lacks any known close relatives. While they initially survived colonization, diseases and military defeats to the French decimated the tribe in the 18th century. Today, the state of South Carolina recognizes two Natchez communities, but most descendants in the United States live as part of other nations in Oklahoma. This coin’s obverse features a Natchez tribesman, who, unlike most other figures in the series, is adorned by jewelry rather than feathers.
On the reverse is the Louisiana black bear. Known by the scientific name “Ursus americanus luteolus,” the subspecies is home to Louisiana and parts of Mississippi and Texas. It is listed on the federal Threatened List, indicating that it is short of endangered but not safe from extinction. The bear lives in forests and bayous and has a long, flat skull and large molars.
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S$1 2017 JAMUL NATION CHOCTAW TRIBE WATER MOCCASIN
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Choctaw Tribe of Mississippi depicting Drinks the Juice of the Stones, the Tribe’s greatest stickball player.
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S$1 2018 JAMUL NATION KIOWA TRIBE WYOMING HORNED LIZARD
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NGC PF 70 ULTRA CAMEO
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This official logo of the Kiowa Tribe shows a Kiowa Warrior of the Plains. The symbolism includes ten eagle feathers which represent the ten Kiowa Medicine Bundles deriving power from the Half Boy, “Tahlee.” The lightning bolt on the front left leg of the horse suggests the voice of thunder heard each Spring and is represented on the Great Drum of the Oh-ho-mah Society as being held in the eagle talons. The bone breast plate and red cape (Spanish Officer coat), the circular blue sky of the Great Plains and the blood red band print are part of the Koitsenko Warrior tradition. The shield depicts the sacred Rainy Mountain in Oklahoma, the sacred Kiowa burial ground at the end of the Great Tribal Journey. The recurring circular patterns represent either the Sun or the Moon, both important in the Kiowa ceremonial dance rituals of the Skaw-Tow (Sundance), the Feather (Ghost) Dance and the Peyote (Native American Church) Service.
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S$1 2016 JAMUL NATION ABENAKI TRIBE NEW HAMPSHIRE BOBCAT
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NGC PF 70 ULTRA CAMEO
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While there are tribes throughout the United States that are well known to anyone who has gone through the American school system, the Abenaki is one that is often overlooked. The Abenaki fiercely resisted attempts to colonize New England and played major roles in several conflicts, including the French and Indian wars. Because of the threats posed to them in New England, many headed north to Canada, where they were given land that remains in their hands in the form of reservations. The obverse of this coin features an aging Abenaki tribesman. While many other coins in the series show men with many feathers in their headdresses, the man on this coin has only two. With his shoulders visible, so too are parts of his traditional clothing.
On the reverse is a bobcat. The wild cat hunts in the woodlands of North America and plays a vital role in the Granite State’s ecosystem. Thanks to the efforts of children at the Well School in Peterborough, it was named the state’s official wildcat. The cat’s ties to those students’ efforts make this coin a particularly good piece for conversation and education, especially for civics teachers.
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S$1 2016 JAMUL NATION MOHAWK TRIBE NEW YORK RACCOON
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NGC PF 70 ULTRA CAMEO
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The Mohawk people earned the name of Keepers of the Eastern Door within the Iroquois League because they guarded the league from invasions of tribes from New England and lower New York. They once lived on territory that ranged from west of the Hudson River to the St. Lawrence River, eastern Ontario, and southern Quebec. Significant populations survive today in Quebec and New York, with nearly 24,000 in the former and a little over 5,600 in the latter. The matrilineal society, they place high importance on the commitment of marriage. This 2018 New York Mohawk Racoon Silver Dollar celebrates the historically important tribe.
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S$1 2016 JAMUL NATION COMANCHE TRIBE TEXAS LONGHORN
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NGC PF 70 ULTRA CAMEO
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While many modern notions of Native Americans life is idealized, the truth is that many tribes had fierce warriors who were well trained. The Comanche were no exception, and while they have not engaged in wars as a tribe for some time, their history continues to be preserved to this day. This coin contributes to that preservation by featuring an image of a Comanche warrior. He looks directly at the holder and has a full feathered headdress that is typical of the tribe.
Featured on the reverse is one of the most iconic animals in the United States, the Texas Longhorn. College football fans know it for the famed ‘hook ‘em horns’ of the University of Texas. The species of cattle, which is raised by many Texas ranchers, is known for the feature that gives it its name. Perhaps no other animal in the country is so closely identified with a particular state.
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S$1 2016 JAMUL NATION SIOUX TRIBE SOUTH DAKOTA BUFFALO
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NGC PF 70 ULTRA CAMEO
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More than 130 years after his death, Sitting Bull remains as one of the greatest Native Americans who ever lived. A Lakota Sioux holy man from the Hunkpapa band, Sitting Bull bravely resisted the U.S. government’s efforts to take over tribal land in the Black Hills. Thanks to his daunting force of will, a confederation of Lakota, Cheyenne and Arapaho Indians met and defeated U.S. troops at the battles of the Rosebud and the Little Big Horn in the summer of 1876 during the Great Sioux War. Considered to be the chief “Hostile” among the Indians, Sitting Bull was the last to surrender to the authority of the government
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S$1 2015 JAMUL NATION BLACKFOOT TRIBE IDAHO PORCUPINE
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NGC PF 70 ULTRA CAMEO
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The Native American Mint’s tribal nations coin series has been extremely popular since its launch in 2015, and that popularity continues with the fourth release of the series, the Idaho 2015 Silver Porcupine Blackfoot Proof coin. Each coin in the series features a state, a tribe associated with that state, as well as an animal considered part of the tribe’s history and culture. With proceeds of the coins going to support Native American charities, and the coins themselves serving to increase awareness of Native American history, the series has quickly become a collector favorite. In fact, these are the only American, non-US government coins available in the marketplace. The Idaho 2015 Silver Porcupine Blackfoot Proof coin honors the Blackfoot tribe whose territory extended throughout Western North America. Today’s remaining Blackfoot population numbers approximately 32,000 total members, spread primarily across the Northern US and western Canada. It also celebrates the humble and cautious porcupine, a symbol of self-preservation and luck.
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S$1 2015 JAMUL NATION IROQUOIS TRIBE PENNSYLVANIA SKUNK
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NGC PF 70 ULTRA CAMEO
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The Native American Silver Dollar series has become an instant favorite among collectors since its launch in 2015, its popularity enduring as it’s continued to honor several tribal nations. Eventually a total of 50 tribes will be commemorated through this series, issued by the Native American Mint. Each coin celebrates a unique state, tribe and animal associated with a Native American tribal nation, in order to raise funds for Native American charities and increase awareness of Native American culture. Importantly, these are the only American, non-US government coins available to collectors today. The fifth coin in the series is the Pennsylvania 2015 Silver Skunk Iroquois Proof, celebrating the extraordinary Iroquois nation. Historically, the Iroquois of the American Northeast were among the most fearsome and powerful tribes--known to the French as the Iroquois League, and later to the British as the Five Nations, and eventually as the Six Nations around the American Revolution. Today there are nearly 125,000 registered tribal members, split between Canada and the United States.
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S$1 2015 JAMUL NATION NAVAJO TRIBE NEW MEXICO COUGAR
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Navajo Tribe of New Mexico featuring a portrait of Captain Cayatanita, a leading warrior among the Navajo people.
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S$1 2015 JAMUL NATION ESKIMO TRIBE ALASKA POLAR BEAR
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NGC PF 70 ULTRA CAMEO
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The rich heritage of the United States would not be possible without the Native American tribes that populated North America and created an indelible mark on our history. Now a new series of silver dollars issued by the Native American Mint commemorates those majestic tribes, with each release featuring a state, a tribe associated with that state, and an animal considered part of the tribe’s history and culture. These coins, crafted to honor the sovereign status of Native American tribes, are intended to preserve and commemorate tribal history and their multi-layered culture. Also of note, these are the only American, non-US government coins available in the marketplace. These coins are minted for collectors and to help raise funds for Native American charities, while improving awareness of Native American sovereign profiles. You can begin your collection of these intriguing coins with the Alaska 2015 Silver Polar Bear Eskimo Proof. "Eskimo" is a generalized name for the many peoples who make up Alaska’s natives, the ancestors of whom migrated to present-day Alaska and Canada thousands of years ago, in multiple waves. Throughout the Arctic and northern areas, the ancestors of this tribe established a complex culture centered around enduring the challenging climate and environment--perhaps best exemplified by their interaction with the polar bear. In the Inuit religion, the polar bear was revered as a powerful near-god, worshiped because this hunting tribe believed the polar bear could decide if hunters would be successful in their attempts to find food for their families.
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S$1 2017 JAMUL NATION NATCHEZ TRIBE LOUISIANA BLACK BEAR
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NGC GEM PROOF
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S$1 2017 JAMUL NATION CHEROKEE TRIBE GEORGIA OTTER
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NGC GEM PROOF
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While men did the fighting over centuries of frequent war in the wake of European colonization in what is today the Southeastern part of the United States, the Cherokee were largely a matrifocal culture. In fact, children were considered part of the tribe of which their mother was a part regardless of whether their father came from the same tribe. Children who had a father who was a Cherokee and a mother of European descent were not considered part of any tribe at all. Even decisions about ascension to leadership posts were subject to the tribe’s women elders, not the men. As such, even though a man features on the obverse of the coin, this is a great option for collectors who honor the important roles of women in society.
On the reverse is an animal that is a consistent favorite at zoos. The playful otter is shown resting upon a rock with its tail sticking into the water. Fans of flipping around in and diving into the water, the amphibious creatures are commonly found in Georgia and other parts of the South. They enjoy eating fish but also eat animals like turtles and crayfish.
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S$1 2015 JAMUL NATION CROW TRIBE MONTANA TIMBER WOLF
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NGC GEM PROOF
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S$1 2018 JAMUL NATION SHOSHONE TRIBE NEVADA DESERT TORTOISE
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NGC PF 70 ULTRA CAMEO
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The Louisiana Purchase nearly doubled the land of the young United States, but much of the territory had yet to be explored. That is why Meriwether Lewis and William Clark were commissioned to explore the area. To guide them, they enlisted Sacagawea, a young woman in the Shoshone Tribe. Sacagawea provided invaluable assistance throughout their journey and became such an important figure in American history that she now has her own dollar coin. This 2018 Nevada Shoshone Desert Tortoise Silver Dollar coin celebrates the Shoshone people, which continues to survive today.
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S$1 2005 CREEK NATION CHIEF MENAWA
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NGC PF 70 ULTRA CAMEO
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S$1 2002 SHAWNEE NATION CHIEF TECUMSEH
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NGC MS 70
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S$1 2020 Jamul Nation Mercury Colorized
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NGC PF 70 ULTRA CAMEO
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This two-coin set is part of a full 9 coin set that will eventually include all eight planets and our Sun. The set honors the solar system utilizing the finest domed technologies like never before. A stunning depiction of the eight planets and our Sun is provided by integrating a complete set of perfectly shaped coins with spectacular high-resolution artwork and full color.
The custom box that these coins come in is one of the most beautifully designed display boxes ever made for a coin set. It is a stunning Solar System depiction with beautiful blue and purple hues. Collectors could display each planet in a circle around the Sun coin in an impressive and colorful custom complimentary package. Planets differ from the sun in size and distance to better reflect their size and position in the solar system, respectively. Coin features are designed such that any planet can be shown in great detail by the elevated, delicate shading, never before seen on such a bold set of coins.
The coin is produced by the Native American Mint, and the federally-recognized sovereign nation of Jamul backs each piece. On the rim of the coin, this detail can be seen, allowing a completely word-free obverse to help guarantee that this is an extremely unique collector's piece.
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S$1 2020 Jamul Nation The Sun Colorized
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NGC PF 70 ULTRA CAMEO
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This two-coin set is part of a full 9 coin set that will eventually include all eight planets and our Sun. The set honors the solar system utilizing the finest domed technologies like never before. A stunning depiction of the eight planets and our Sun is provided by integrating a complete set of perfectly shaped coins with spectacular high-resolution artwork and full color.
The custom box that these coins come in is one of the most beautifully designed display boxes ever made for a coin set. It is a stunning Solar System depiction with beautiful blue and purple hues. Collectors could display each planet in a circle around the Sun coin in an impressive and colorful custom complimentary package. Planets differ from the sun in size and distance to better reflect their size and position in the solar system, respectively. Coin features are designed such that any planet can be shown in great detail by the elevated, delicate shading, never before seen on such a bold set of coins.
The coin is produced by the Native American Mint, and the federally-recognized sovereign nation of Jamul backs each piece. On the rim of the coin, this detail can be seen, allowing a completely word-free obverse to help guarantee that this is an extremely unique collector's piece.
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S$1 2018 Jamul Nation Comanche Spear Colorized
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NGC PF 70 ULTRA CAMEO
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Comanche spears were forceful weapons and sharp spear tips made them powerful tools for hunting and battle.
Oklahoma Plains were home to the Comanche tribe, Indians who lived primarily off of game and wild roots and berries. To hunt and fish, the Comanche depended on effective weapons and were known for their skill with the bow. Each bow, however, could take weeks or months to fashion, so the more easily made spear, with its lethal spear tip, became an important weapon to the tribe.
Comanche spears were made from long wooden sticks or animal bones. The Comanche would attach spear tips, made by chipping away obsidian rock until it came to a razor-like, point, making the weapon truly deadly. Obsidian was formed from an active volcano melting through cracks at the base and was found mainly in the West, used most often by the Western Comanche tribes.
From small, bird-hunting tips to large spear tips meant for wild game like the buffalo, the Comanche were not only skilled in fashioning the deadly weapon, they were experts at wielding it for a successful hunts and battles.
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S$1 2020 Jamul Nation Cheyenne War Club Colorized
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NGC PF 70 ULTRA CAMEO
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Cheyenne War Club Curved Coin The Native American Curved Weapons Series honors tribes pairing them with an original Native American weapon that they may have used in battles among one another and with immigrants over many centuries. The Cheyenne tribe is paired with the War Club in this series. A part of the 8 coin Curved Weapons Series from the Native American Mint.
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