Image from my own collection.
Image from my own collection.




There are fakes were they try to sand down the one leg, so here are a few things to look for.
1.The farthest back leg will have less then normal.
2.There are dots on the belly that seem out of place.
3.The "P" and "U" from the Pluribus and Unum will be further back then the normal buffalo.
If you have all these find a specialist and get it cheeked
A mint condition one could be worth $20,000 plus.
A not so good one goes for about $1,000.
SEE THE MOST EXPENSIVE COIN HERE


In 1974 the president changed the law so that any more found will not be melted. For forty years there hadn't been any sign of the infamous 1933 double eagle coin. In 2001 one turns up at a dealer in New York. The dealer started claiming that someone sold it to him over the counter, then changed his story and said that it came from Egypt. After a legal battle it was decided that they would auction this one and split the profits ($7,590,020) between the government and the dealer. In 2004 the dealer dies and his heir turns up with ten more 1933 double eagles, which of course the secret service confiscated. They are now being held at Fort Knox. The new owner of the coins has got a lawyer and is trying to have them returned. One turned up in Egypt recently in a closet full of old junk. It's still illegal today to posses the 1933 double eagle except the one auctioned in 2002. It's believed that the twenty that have turned up so far were stolen by a cashier for the mint that replaced them with older double eagles.