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146:, appointed commissioner, bought ten acres south of Dahlonega for $ 1,050 (equal to $ 31,012 today) in August 1835, and hired the architect Benjamin Towns, the lowest bidder at $ 33,450 (equal to $ 987,962 today), to construct the mint within eighteen months. Mint machinery was installed in 1837, which included "cutting presses, a fly wheel, a drawing frame, a crank shaft, a coining press, and eighteen annealing pans." The coining press could make "fifty to sixty gold coins per minute."
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202:. It is believed that after the Confederates took over the mint in 1861, that some gold dollars and half eagles were minted under the authority of the Confederate States Government. The exact number of 1861-D gold dollars produced is unknown, while approximately 1,597 1861-D half eagles were struck. Because of their relatively low mintage, all Dahlonega-minted gold coins are rare. It is generally accepted that gold coins estimated to exceed $ 6 million were
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Superintendent Dr. Joseph
Singleton, opened the mint in February 1838. About a thousand ounces of gold were deposited in the first week, and the first coins consisting of eighty five-dollar gold pieces, were minted on 17 April.
248:'s activities as what's going on "under the gold dome". After the capitol building was gold leafed citizens of Dahlonega began a campaign to gold leaf Price Memorial Hall after the same fashion as the capitol.
116:, which opened in 1906, over four decades after the Dahlonega Mint closed. All coins from the Dahlonega Mint are gold, in the $ 1, $ 2.50, $ 3, and $ 5 denominations, and bear dates in the range 1838–1861.
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in
December 1878. A new building for the college was erected on the foundations of the old mint building. This building is now named Price Memorial Hall after
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140:...for the coinage of gold only; and one branch at or near Dahlonega, in Lumpkin County, in the state of Georgia, also for the coinage of gold only."
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practice military drill in front of the former
Dahlonega Mint in 1877 or 1878. The college used the building from 1873 until it burned down in 1878.
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After the end of the Civil War, The United States
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in 1873. The mint building was used as the main academic and administrative building for the college until a fire
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426:"An Illustrated History of the Georgia Gold Rush and the United States Branch Mint at Dahlonega, Georgia"
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The mint produced coins every year from 1838 through 1861. Denominations produced included
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nominated him for the position on
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488:'Thar's Gold in Them Thar Hills': Gold and Gold Mining in Georgia, 1830s-1940s
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482:"A Brief History of the United States Branch Mint at Dahlonega, Georgia"
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Winter, Douglas "Gold Coins of the
Dahlonega Mint" 1997. DWN Publishing
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Journal of the
Executive Proceedings of the Senate of the United States
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from this area also covers the exterior of the domed roof over the
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392:. Columbia, South Carolina: University of South Carolina Press.
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The
Georgia Gold Rush: Twenty-Niners, Cherokees, and Gold Fever
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for the coinage of gold and silver; one branch at the town of
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Former branch of the United States Mint in
Dahlonega, Georgia
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broke out in 1861, the
Dahlonega Mint was seized by the
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Six men acted as Superintendent of the Dahlonega Mint.
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108:. Coins produced at the Dahlonega Mint bear the "D"
132:on 3 March, established "one branch at the city of
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497:Price Memorial Building State Historical Marker
100:. It was located at (34°31.8′N 83°59.2′W ) in
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244:. Local media often refer to the
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220:destroyed the original building
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902:National Numismatic Collection
842:Black Eagle Silver Certificate
702:America the Beautiful (silver)
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447:United States Senate (1887).
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451:. Vol. 4. p. 584.
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293:Anderson Redding, 1849–1853
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476:Dahlonega, A Brief History
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321:American Civil War portal
302:George Kellogg, 1860–1861
284:Paul Rossignol, 1841–1843
182:(1854 only); and $ 5.00 (
732:American Palladium Eagle
388:Williams, David (1993).
1004:Lumpkin County, Georgia
867:Continental dollar coin
737:American Liberty (gold)
727:American Platinum Eagle
717:American Buffalo (gold)
428:. Gold Rush Gallery Inc
362:California gold coinage
106:Lumpkin County, Georgia
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882:Obsolete denominations
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130:United States Congress
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238:Georgia State Capitol
216:North Georgia College
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144:Ignatius Alphonso Few
128:, established by the
36:North Georgia College
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943:Replacement banknote
837:Bicentennial coinage
572:Federal Reserve Note
516:at Wikimedia Commons
288:James Fairlie Cooper
932:Novus ordo seclorum
877:Large denominations
747:Current paper money
722:First Spouse (gold)
712:American Gold Eagle
484:, by Carl N. Lester
335:Architecture portal
162:Reverse of an 1843
60:34.5299°N 83.9871°W
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478:, by Anne Amerson
246:state legislature
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290:, 1843–1849
184:half eagles
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114:Denver Mint
63: /
973:Categories
669:Dime (10¢)
659:Penny (1¢)
597:West Point
432:January 2,
399:1570030529
368:References
251:For other
174:; $ 2.50 (
164:half eagle
154:Production
51:83°59′14″W
48:34°31′48″N
938:Nicknames
872:Funnyback
821:$ 100,000
612:Dahlonega
607:Charlotte
577:U.S. Mint
490:from the
230:Gold leaf
194:When the
138:Charlotte
110:mint mark
102:Dahlonega
816:$ 10,000
307:See also
120:Creation
830:Related
811:$ 5,000
806:$ 1,000
499:at the
242:Atlanta
236:of the
234:rotunda
90:assayed
80:of the
582:Denver
555:Topics
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206:here.
204:minted
180:$ 3.00
172:$ 1.00
94:minted
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801:$ 500
785:$ 100
897:Mill
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775:$ 20
770:$ 10
434:2014
394:ISBN
124:The
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760:$ 2
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