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The Morgan silver dollars of 1878 to 1904 and 1921 are probably the most collected U.S. coins other than Lincoln pennies. Designed by the U.S. Mint’s chief engraver, George T. Morgan, the coin featured a profile of a garlanded Lady Liberty on the obverse, with an eagle clutching arrows and an olive branch on the reverse.
When the Morgan was introduced, the United States had been without a circulating silver dollar since 1873 (there were Trade Dollars, but those were only used in the Orient). Gold coins filled in until the Bland-Allison Act paved the way for an official silver coin...
That first year, some 20-million Morgans were struck at mints in Philadelphia, Carson City, and San Francisco, but the variations in the coin’s reverse suggest it was still a bit of a work in progress. That’s because the tails of some of the eagles on the backs of the coins have eight feathers while other have seven.
Morgans are one of two silver-dollar types scrutinized for their VAMs, which are the minute variations caused by the different dies used to strike the coins. Named for authors and coin researchers Leroy C. Van Allen and A. George Mallis, VAMs are widely used by collectors to catalog and identify Morgan and Peace Dollars.
For example, VAM-5, minted in Philadelphia in 1878, is considered by VAM enthusiasts to be one of the most prized Morgans around. It is an eight-tail-feather coin, some of whose letters have been doubled during minting. The New Orleans version of VAM-4 from 1888 is the famous "Hot Lips" coin, so called because Lady Liberty’s lips appear to be doubled. Though the top grades of this coin are rather rare and costly, the lower grades are relatively common.
Coinage of Morgans ceased in 1904 due to a silver shortage, and then resumed in 1921. That year, more than 80-million Morgans were minted in Philadelphia, San Francisco, and Denver, but 1921 was also the year that the Morgan would be replaced by the Peace Dollar, a coin minted to commemorate the end of World War I a few years earlier.

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