CoinLiberty V Nickel 
with Cents
Year1886
MintPhiladelphia
Graded byPCGS
GradeXF40
SKU47116354.sks
Notes


Liberty V Nickels With Cents (1883-1912)

Designed by Charles Barber the Liberty Nickel was produced for circulation between 1883 and 1912. The coin features a portrait of Liberty on the obverse encircled with thirteen stars. The reverse has the Roman numeral V for five encircled by a wreath of corn, wheat, maple and oak. The word CENTS appears at the bottom to thwart those that attempted to pass off plated “No Cent” examples as five dollar gold coins. The entire series was produced at the Philadelphia Mint save the final year that saw coins struck in small quantities at both Denver and San Francisco facilities. These dates along with the 1885 and 1886 are the keys to the complete set. Barber’s pedestrian design was eventually replaced by the Buffalo nickel in 1913. A few Liberty examples were clandestinely struck that year, but were not intended for circulation and remain extremely rare with just five known. 

  • Obverse: Liberty Facing Left wearing a Coronet bearing Oak, Cotton and Wheat (trade goods) and braided hair. Around Rim 13 Stars.
  • Reverse: Laureate of Wheat, Oak, Cotton and Corn around a V. Around Rim United States of America Cents. Motto E Pluribus Unum.
This is a PCGS graded coin. You will receive the coin pictured. You are purchasing an 1886 Liberty V Nickel with Cents in an PCGS holder graded XF40.