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Description

1927-S Standing Liberty Quarter, MS65 Full Head
A Remarkable Strike Rarity and Series Key

1927-S 25C MS65 Full Head PCGS. CAC. This Gem Full Head 1927-S quarter boasts a thick overlay of mint frost complementing a light golden tinge, which is somewhat deeper on the obverse. Design definition is excellent for the issue; Liberty's toes are separated, the stars are well-defined, and the head, though slightly soft at the ear hole, is sharper than those seen on many other Full Head representatives. The central gown lines, a few shield rivets, and the eagle's feathers are soft, as is expected for this San Francisco issue.

An interesting characteristic of most surviving Full Head representatives is that they were coined with severely clashed dies. Mint efforts to efface the resulting marks left numerous striations in the die face, which were then transferred to the coins as they were struck. This is a typical specimen in that regard, with remnants of the clash marks still visible on each side.

Population Data (7/14): Only 23 examples have been awarded a Full Head designation by PCGS in all grades; of them, three have been deemed worthy of the MS65 grade level (one in 65+), and three have been certified finer. NGC has seen 22 Full Head representatives in all grades, with five awarded Gem status but only one finer. Given the large value spikes from one successive Full Head grade point level to the next, those figures certainly include resubmissions.

Heritage Commentary: Of the three mints that struck Standing Liberty quarters, the San Francisco facility consistently had the most trouble producing sharp strikes, a problem that spanned the duration of the series. The difficulty in producing sharp strikes was blamed in part on the design. Concerns about the relief of designer Hermon MacNeil's models were originally addressed in mid-1916, several months prior to the first production run of the design, when Chief Engraver Charles Barber was allowed to work up the designs to the mechanical requirements of the Mint. The design change of mid-1917, however, effectively reversed many of Barber's modifications, with the result that significantly more die pressure was needed to fully impress the details. The San Francisco Mint, already operating with lower production values than Philadelphia, magnified the problem from that point forward, which ultimately aided in the series' demise at the close of 1930.

The 1927-S is perhaps the most famous illustration of the California mint's struggle with the design. Writing in Standing Liberty Quarters, fourth edition, Jay Cline writes:

"Like most S mint coins, this date comes weakly struck. Very weak, especially in the head, shield, lines on the shield (vertical and horizontal). Full Heads in Uncirculated condition are almost nonexistent."



Additionally, the date's low mintage of 396,000 pieces -- a number inadequate even to supply every citizen of San Francisco with an example -- has long been recognized as the second-lowest in the series (behind only the 1916), but the issue's key-date status was not fully appreciated until the advent of third-party certification. The addition of the modifier "Full Head" to the grade descriptions of coins exhibiting such detail effectively changed not only the way Standing Liberty quarters were collected, but also the perceived rarity of most issues within the series, notably the 1927-S. Cline writes:

"The 1927-S has such a low mintage that there are few Full Heads in existence. If all Full Heads [that were ever struck] had been withheld from circulation, it would still have been the scarcest S mint of the entire series excluding of course the 1918/7-S. ... Your author would rate it three to five times rarer than the 1916 in Full Head. With that said, the present price for a 1927-S FH is not in line with the real scarcity of the coin. In the 45 years your author has collected and admired these coins, the ratio I have observed is at least one 1927-S to twenty-five 1916s with Full Heads. ... Enough cannot be said about the 1927-S in Full Head. It is as scarce as the [1918/7-S] overdate with a Full Head."



Due to its rarity, the 1927-S is a driving force behind the ranking of Standing Liberty quarter Registry Sets. It is one of only two issues to which the PCGS Set Composition awards a hefty seven points, the other being the lower-mintage 1916; additionally, the 1927-S with a Full Head designation receives a two-point bump, while the 1916 in Full Head receives only one. Examining the current finest Registry Sets, we note that several of them lack the 1927-S in Full Head, even though a couple do have remarkably high-grade coins; in fact, in the current highest-rated set, the 1927-S is the only coin represented that lacks the coveted designation. The Gem Full Head here offered, with spirited bidding, could upgrade (or secure) the ranking of a fine, high-end collection.(Registry values: N14284)

Coin Index Numbers: (NGC ID# 243W, PCGS# 5765, Greysheet# 5598)

Metal: 90% Silver, 10% Copper
Weight: 6.25 grams
ASW: 0.20oz
Mintage: 396,000


View Certification Details from PCGS

View Certification Details from CAC sticker

Auction Info

Auction Dates
October, 2014
27th Monday
Bids + Registered Phone Bidders: 26
Lot Tracking Activity: N/A
Page Views: 4,259

Buyer's Premium per Lot:
17.5% of the successful bid per lot.

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