Vintage 1986 Liberty Mint Liberty Bell Silver Round

I recently showed you the 1991 Liberty Mint Bill of Rights Silver Round. What I didn't mention was Howard Ruff and Larry Ruff were the original owners of the Provo, Utah-based Liberty Mint. Financial advisor and editor of the pro-hard money investing journal The Ruff Times, Howard Joseph Ruff retired in 2004. The Ruff family operated Liberty Mint from its inception in 1984 until 1989. After that, it was sold on 1990, Liberty Mint, Ltd. It stopped operations in 1999.

1986 Liberty Mint 1 oz Liberty Bell Silver Round BU

The Liberty Bell is shown on the obverse. At the top, the word "LIBERTY MINT" is etched, while the lower edge is adorned with 14 stars. The weight of "ONE TROY OUNCE" is at the right of the bell, and the purity and content of ".999 FINE SILVER" are to the left of the bell. Beneath the bell to the left is the date "1986".

The wording from Section 10 of the US Constitution, which addresses the repayment of debts with gold and silver, is the main focus of the reverse. The words "** LIBERTY MINT **" and "ONE TROY OUNCE *** 999+ FINE SILVER," along with the weight, purity, and content, are inscribed around the outside edge of the coin.

"No State shall make anything
but GOLD and SILVER COIN
a legal tender in payment of debt"

- Article 1, Section 10, U.S. Constitution

Source

Liberty Mint produced several rounds. The USS Constitution Rounds, 1985,1986, and undated Statue of Liberty Rounds, and other miscellaneous commemorative event rounds in both dated and undated silver rounds. The mintage numbers on this Liberty Mint Liberty Bell is unknown.

MetalSilver
Metal Content1 Oz
Purity.999 Fine Silver
Year1986
Issuing CountryUnited States
SeriesLiberty Bell
MintageUnkown
ManufacturerLiberty Mint
Thickness2.70 mm
Diameter39.0 mm
Edge DesignReeded
Mint MarkN/A


You can learn new things and increase your money at the same time by engaging in the fascinating and entertaining hobby of collecting vintage silver. Several people view investing in precious metals as a method to secure something that may come in handy in the future if necessary, as they are known to keep their worth. Not to mention, it's just a great pastime that can introduce you to amazing local and virtual communities. Think on the things you want to have in your collection to begin with, then proceed accordingly. If you get interested in anything different later, you may always change your mind!

(This is not a financial advise.)


These are the vintage rounds I have recently shown:

Vintage Hamilton Mint U.S.S. Sacramento
Vintage Hamilton Mint U.S.S.San Francisco
Vintage Hamilton Mint U.S.S. Honolulu
Vintage 1982 Northstar Mint Morgan Round
Vintage 1991 Liberty Mint Bill of Rights Round
Vintage 1993 American Pacific Mint Peace Dollar Trade Round
Vintage 1984 Parliament Shield Silver Round
Vintage 1985 Johnson Matthey Alaska Round
Vintage Columbia Mint George Washington Round
Vintage 1974 USPS Universal Postal Union Round
Vintage 1972 USPS Universal Postal Union Round
Vintage 1986 Silver Statue of Liberty
Vintage California Crown Mint Silver Round
Vintage AS&M Eagle Silver Round
Vintage Liberty Lobby Lady Liberty Silver Round
Vintage Rariteis Liberty Silver Round



Reference
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Howard_Ruff
https://en.numista.com/catalogue/exonumia21655.html



😍#ilikeitalot!😍

Gold and Silver Stacking is not for everyone.
Do your own research!

If you want to learn more, we are here at the Silver Gold Stackers Community. Come join us!

Thank you for stopping by to view this article.

I hope to see you again soon!

Hugs and Kisses πŸ₯°πŸŒΊπŸ€™!!!!





I post an article daily. I feature precious metals every other day, and on other days I post articles of general interest. Follow me on my journey to save in silver and gold.

@silversaver888

.

! [Hidden Spoiler Text] This is the spoiler content.
Optionally with more lines

H2
H3
H4
3 columns
2 columns
1 column
73 Comments
Ecency