1839 Gobrecht, Restrike, Copper Pattern Dollar PR BN J-109 Values

Greysheet & Red Book® Price Guide

Sponsor

shop eBay

Sponsor

shop CAC

Sponsor

shop Whitman

Sponsor

shop US Coins and Jewelry

Sponsor

shop Great Collections

1839 Gobrecht, Restrike, Copper Pattern Dollar PR BN J-109 Values

Details

Restrikes made with the die used to coin J-60 of 1836. The use of stars on both obverse and reverse is illogical. Die alignment III.

Obverse: Liberty seated with stars, die as preceding.

Reverse: Flying eagle in field of 26 stars (style of 1836).

Basic Information

GSID:

12084

Coin Date:

1839

Denomination:

PS$1 / Pattern Dollar

Designation:

PR

Mint & Coinage Details

Mint Location:

Philadelphia

Mintage:

Unique

Coinage Type:

Pattern

Coinage Years:

1839

Composition:

Copper

Varieties and Classification

Variety:

Gobrecht, Restrike, Copper

Variety 2:

J-109

Rarity:

R-unique

Physical Characteristics

Strike Type:

Proof

Coin Shape:

Round

Design Details

Available on Greysheet Marketplace

View All

Dealer Directory

View All Dealers

Greysheet News

View All News
Over $10 Million in Rare U.S. Gold Coins in James A. Stack, Sr. Collection, Part II
Over $10 Million in Rare U.S. Gold Coins in James A. Stack, Sr. Collection, Part II
2/3/2026

The auction will be held on Tuesday, February 3 in Griffin Studios in Stack's Bowers Galleries international headquarters in Costa Mesa, CA.

Stack's Bowers Galleries Launches Premier E-Commerce Marketplace and New Collection Management Tool for Coin and Banknote Collectors
Stack's Bowers Galleries Launches Premier E-Commerce Marketplace and New Collection Management Tool for Coin and Banknote Collectors
2/3/2026

The Marketplace and Collection Management tools combine expert-verified purchasing with modern collection organization and tracking.

No Dollars? Capped Bust Half Dollars in the China Trade
No Dollars? Capped Bust Half Dollars in the China Trade
1/28/2026

According to Representative Campbell P. White, in his congressional report of 1832, the exportation of half dollars carried on steadily after 1804 and was extensive from 1811–1821.