The Indian Gold Eagle was the final design used for the $10 denomination of the US Eagle. Redesigned in 1907, the Indian Gold Eagle was one of two designs from Augustus Saint-Gaudens to grace the final iterations of US Eagle gold coinage. Available regularly from 1795 into the 20th century, the $10 Indian Gold Eagle ran into intermittent coining after 1916 and was notably struck just once in the 1920s at the Philadelphia Mint. Right now, 1926 $10 Indian Gold Eagle Coins with a Mint State grade are available to purchase online from JM Bullion.
Coin Highlights:
Each 1926 $10 Indian Gold Eagle Coin listed here earned a Mint State 62 certification from either the PCGS or the NGC. Coins in this condition exhibit impaired or dull luster, clusters of small marks throughout the fields, and a few larger detracting flaws in the primary focal areas. Please note that we cannot guarantee which grading house label you will receive with your purchase. Once your payment clears, we will fulfill your order based on in-stock items at that moment in time. You will receive a coin graded MS62 with the potential for either a PCGS or NGC grading label. If you buy more than one, you could receive coins with all PCGS labels, all NGC labels, or a mixture.
The 1926 issue of the $10 Indian Gold Eagle at the Philadelphia Mint was the lone striking of this coin at that mint location throughout the entirety of the 1920s. Today, there is only an estimated 10% of the original mintage of 1926 Indian Gold Eagles still available. A graded Mint State item represents a small portion of that 10% remainder from the original issue.
On the obverse of 1926 $10 Indian Eagle Coins is a left-profile portrait of Liberty. Saint-Gaudens’ redesign of the Gold Eagle in 1907 envisioned a traditional Liberty figure with an indigenous headdress upon her head. There is an arch of 13 stars over her head and a date mark below.
The reverse side of the 1926 $10 Indian Gold Eagle features an American bald eagle perched with its wings resting at its sides. The eagle is perched on a sheaf of arrows that is wrapped in an olive branch, a twist on the traditional heraldic eagle design and its use of the arrows of war and olive branch of peace in the eagle’s talons.
If you have questions, please feel free to ask. JM Bullion customer service is available at 800-276-6508, online using our live chat, and through our email address.
Tracking and insurance included on all orders
"Greatly enjoying perusing and procuring from the excellent JM Bullion web site!"
"This is a really sharp coin! Mine turned out to be an NGC graded example: solid strike, mostly clean fields and lots of mint luster. I paid by echeck and that was a very smooth and easy transaction. I tracked the coin right to my mailbox, the letter carrier never tried to get a signature or make "eye contact," so keep an eye out for delivery. In this fake, fantasy, virtual, crypto-inflated world---what is real?---Gold and Silver you can hold in your hands! It's money. Tom D. "
The Indian Gold Eagle was the final design used for the $10 denomination of the US Eagle. Redesigned in 1907, the Indian Gold Eagle was one of two designs from Augustus Saint-Gaudens to grace the final iterations of US Eagle gold coinage. Available regularly from 1795 into the 20th century, the $10 Indian Gold Eagle ran into intermittent coining after 1916 and was notably struck just once in the 1920s at the Philadelphia Mint. Right now, 1926 $10 Indian Gold Eagle Coins with a Mint State grade are available to purchase online from JM Bullion.
Coin Highlights:
Each 1926 $10 Indian Gold Eagle Coin listed here earned a Mint State 62 certification from either the PCGS or the NGC. Coins in this condition exhibit impaired or dull luster, clusters of small marks throughout the fields, and a few larger detracting flaws in the primary focal areas. Please note that we cannot guarantee which grading house label you will receive with your purchase. Once your payment clears, we will fulfill your order based on in-stock items at that moment in time. You will receive a coin graded MS62 with the potential for either a PCGS or NGC grading label. If you buy more than one, you could receive coins with all PCGS labels, all NGC labels, or a mixture.
The 1926 issue of the $10 Indian Gold Eagle at the Philadelphia Mint was the lone striking of this coin at that mint location throughout the entirety of the 1920s. Today, there is only an estimated 10% of the original mintage of 1926 Indian Gold Eagles still available. A graded Mint State item represents a small portion of that 10% remainder from the original issue.
On the obverse of 1926 $10 Indian Eagle Coins is a left-profile portrait of Liberty. Saint-Gaudens’ redesign of the Gold Eagle in 1907 envisioned a traditional Liberty figure with an indigenous headdress upon her head. There is an arch of 13 stars over her head and a date mark below.
The reverse side of the 1926 $10 Indian Gold Eagle features an American bald eagle perched with its wings resting at its sides. The eagle is perched on a sheaf of arrows that is wrapped in an olive branch, a twist on the traditional heraldic eagle design and its use of the arrows of war and olive branch of peace in the eagle’s talons.
If you have questions, please feel free to ask. JM Bullion customer service is available at 800-276-6508, online using our live chat, and through our email address.
"Greatly enjoying perusing and procuring from the excellent JM Bullion web site!"
"This is a really sharp coin! Mine turned out to be an NGC graded example: solid strike, mostly clean fields and lots of mint luster. I paid by echeck and that was a very smooth and easy transaction. I tracked the coin right to my mailbox, the letter carrier never tried to get a signature or make "eye contact," so keep an eye out for delivery. In this fake, fantasy, virtual, crypto-inflated world---what is real?---Gold and Silver you can hold in your hands! It's money. Tom D. "