Times were very good for many Americans in the mid- to
late-1920s: the stock market had grown exponentially
driven, in part, by a frenzy of investing which sent
stock prices well beyond their true value. In 1929, the
frenzy ended. Black Tuesday started a stock market crash
which ultimately led to the Great Depression.
By
1933, the demoralized nation looked to Washington, D.C.
and President Franklin D. Roosevelt for salvation.
Recognizing the inherent value of a currency based upon
gold, and seeking to stabilize the U.S. dollar,
Roosevelt confiscated gold coins owned by American
citizens (all but $100 worth per individual).
Americans were required to turn in their gold coins
to a Federal Reserve Bank in exchange under penalty of
large fines and/or jail sentences. There were only a few
exceptions, one being:
"gold coins having a recognized special value to
collectors of rare and unusual coins."
You can view the actual Executive Order and read the
terms of confiscation by clicking on the picture to your
right.
The government melted the majority of the confiscated
coins into bars. The government then devalued the dollar
and raised gold’s value by nearly 75%.
Rare coin collectors, exempted by the confiscation
actually profited from the confiscation, melting, and
price revaluation in two important ways. Their coins
gained value due to the:
- Significant increase of the gold bullion value
of their coins.
- Massive official melting of the confiscated gold
coins. This melting made the limited number of
surviving coins in collections more scarce and,
thus, more valuable.
These government actions helped President Roosevelt
and Congress inflate the U.S. economy during the mid-
and late-1930s. These actions also led to a loss of a
number of important freedoms for the American people -
freedom from long-term inflation, expanding government
spending, gold confiscation (except collectors), and
government intrusion into their private financial
matters.
Owning gold coins has helped protect portfolios from
inflation, devaluation, and intrusive government for
thousands of years. The events of the 1930s and the
decades that followed prove the importance of owning
collectible gold coins.