I found that difficult to believe, but the examples sitting in my own collection (from all three mints) seem to confirm it, with the word GOD returning to its usual appearance the next year, in 1927.
Sorry about the darkness of the images…'

Congratulations on your 1921. I am still looking for a decent piece at a resonable price . The 1921 is not too rare but allways comes with a hefty premium due to the great story linked to this one-year-type.villa66 hat geschrieben: ↑Sa 07.03.20 08:10I lucked into a decent 1921 Peace dollar and have been playing with it for two weeks solid. (The ;21 Peace is one of the most interesting coins in the entire American series) Along the way I learned something about the Peace dollars of 1926 that I cannot remember having read before—the word GOD in the motto IN GOD WE TRUST had been recut and emphasized.
I found that difficult to believe, but the examples sitting in my own collection (from all three mints) seem to confirm it, with the word GOD returning to its usual appearance the next year, in 1927.
Sorry about the darkness of the images…'
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Schön distinguishes the 1921 issue from the later issues:“…this one-year-type.” It is a one-year type, and why Krause has been so backward in recognizing that in their standard catalogs is something I’ve never understood. Any idea whether Schӧn gives the 1921 a separate catalog number? (I gave Numista a quick look and didn’t see anything.)
Komisch, weil auch 1922 high relief existiert, aber nur als PP, daher müsste es dann 3 Nummern geben.klaupo hat geschrieben: ↑Mo 16.03.20 19:00Schön distinguishes the 1921 issue from the later issues:“…this one-year-type.” It is a one-year type, and why Krause has been so backward in recognizing that in their standard catalogs is something I’ve never understood. Any idea whether Schӧn gives the 1921 a separate catalog number? (I gave Numista a quick look and didn’t see anything.)
S# 22.1 High relief 1921 - VF 60,- EF 120,- UNC 300,- Proof 2.400,-
S# 22.2 Flat relief 1922-1928, 1934, 1935 - VF 10,- EF 18,- UNC 35,- Proof 400,-
Kind regards
klaupo
No—with respect—I don’t think that’s the problem here. (I’ve spent a lot of time over the years puzzling out the slenderest of design differences between coins with different KM numbers, and have vehemently objected to their sometime practice of assigning different KM numbers to coins merely because of their different mintmarks.)coinnuttius hat geschrieben: ↑Mo 20.04.20 21:55KM orientiert sich eher am offensichtlichem Design und Material....
Hi,villa66 hat geschrieben: ↑Do 30.04.20 07:18No—with respect—I don’t think that’s the problem here. (I’ve spent a lot of time over the years puzzling out the slenderest of design differences between coins with different KM numbers, and have vehemently objected to their sometime practice of assigning different KM numbers to coins merely because of their different mintmarks.)coinnuttius hat geschrieben: ↑Mo 20.04.20 21:55KM orientiert sich eher am offensichtlichem Design und Material....
Instead I think the difficulty with the American section’s KM numbers lies in the patchwork nature of the catalog, and its American origins. Krause published coin magazines for the American market that included periodic price listings of American coins, and when they began assembling their big world catalogs in the 1970's I had the impression that they had merely imported their existing template into the American section of the KM.
So there were no catalog numbers assigned to American coins in the KM, an omission that took many years to correct. But of course that deficiency didn’t matter much to most Americans who used the books, because catalog numbers aren’t traditionally used in the general collecting of U.S. coins—die varieties in certain series, patterns and trial strikes being notable exceptions.
Yeoman,--in his world type catalogs—Scott, and Breen have all generated catalog numbering systems for American coinage, but they are more or less irrelevant to most American collectors, who have for many decades learned the hobby’s basics from the Bluebook and Redbook, both of which are simple creatures of series, date and mintmark.
Bottom-line is that the American tradition of date-collecting has resulted in a slow and uneven assigning of type numbers in the KM’s American section. It’s too much to expect them to break the 1921 Morgan out on its own, but the 1921 Peace is an easy call—it’s that much different from all the other dates in the series (a handful of rogue ’22 proofs notwithstanding!). But the one that’s really wrong, though, is the Standing Liberty quarter.
The Buffalo nickel (5-cent piece) has two KM numbers because of a hollowed-out exergue. The same should be done with the 1917-24 and the 1925-30 Standing Liberty quarters. There too the difference is a hollowed-out exergue (this time to protect the date). It’s an easy difference to see, but not only does KM not give them their own catalog numbers (as of the 2016 edition), there’s not even a note to explain the change—or the substantial difference in prices beginning in 1925, after the change.
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