2016 Harpers Ferry 5 Oz Silver Uncirculated Coin Release

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Harpers Ferry National Historical Park of West Virginia is the newest national site honored on a large format silver coin now available from the United States Mint. Struck from five ounces of .999 fine silver with a diameter of three inches, the collectible is the third 2016-dated release from the U.S. Mint’s program of America the Beautiful Five Ounce Silver Uncirculated Coins.

2016-P Harpers Ferry National Historical Park Five Ounce Silver Uncirculated Coin and Presentation Case
2016-P Harpers Ferry Five Ounce Silver Uncirculated Coins arrive encapsulated, set inside a protective outer box and come with a United States Mint Certificate of Authenticity. The coin is the 33rd in the program overall, and the third issued in 2016. It launched on Thursday, July 14, at noon ET.

Harpers Ferry National Historical Park has played an important role in history; even before its establishment as a national park. Its position as a passage area of the Potomac through the Blue Ridge Mountains insured its importance, becoming one of the first industrial centers of the nation as well as a site of important military events.

Coin Designs

Featured on the coin’s reverse is John Brown’s Fort, the site of his last stand during his raid on the Harper’s Ferry Armory. The design was created by United States Mint Artistic Infusion Program (AIP) artist Thomas Hipschen with sculpting completed by United States Mint Sculptor-Engraver Phebe Hemphill.

2016-P Harpers Ferry National Historical Park Five Ounce Silver Uncirculated Coin
Shown is the reverse or tails side of the 2016-P Harpers Ferry National Historical Park Five Ounce Silver Uncirculated Coin. It features John Brown’s Fort. Inscriptions around the design read: HARPERS FERRY, WEST VIRGINIA, 2016, and E PLURIBUS UNUM.

If the coin image looks familiar, it is because it was also used for the Harpers Ferry quarter released earlier as part of the U.S. Mint’s America the Beautiful Quarters® Program.

Also, and like that quarter series, the silver coin’s obverse shares the basic portrait of George Washington, the first President of the United States. The effigy was created by John Flanagan.

2015-P Homestead National Monument of America Five Ounce Silver Uncirculated Coin, Obverse
Here is a photo of the obverse or heads side of an America the Beautiful Five Ounce Silver Uncirculated Coin. The design is shared across the series, just on companion quarters. Shared inscriptions include: UNITED STATES OF AMERICA, IN GOD WE TRUST, LIBERTY and QUARTER DOLLAR.

In addition, a ‘P’ mint mark appears to the right of the effigy, which indicates the coin was produced at the U.S. Mint’s facility in Philadelphia.

2015 Homestead 5 Oz Silver Coin Edges
This photo shows incused edge letterings that are on all America the Beautiful Five Ounce Silver Coins

Finally, an edge inscription completes the designs, reading .999 FINE SILVER 5.0 OUNCE to denote the content and size of each collector coin.

Ordering and Mintage

Priced at $149.95, the 2016-P Harpers Ferry National Historical Park Five Ounce Silver Uncirculated Coin is available from the U.S. Mint on this product page or by calling 1-800-USA-MINT (872-6468).

This coin’s maximum potential mintage limit is 30,000, although that can be adjusted lower if demand is high for the related bullion version.

Bullion Five Ounce Silver Edition

The U.S. Mint also produces a bullion version that is intended for investors. Specifications for bullion editions are nearly identical to the uncirculated coins. The two major differences include their brilliant finish and a lack of a mint mark, although they are also produced at the Philadelphia Mint.

2015 Homestead 5 Oz Silver Bullion and Uncirculated Coins, Obverses
Here is a photo of obverse sides of America the Beautiful Five Ounce Silver Coins. A bullion version is left and a collector uncirculated edition is right. The collectible coin bears a ‘P’ mint mark below ‘IN GOD WE TRUST’.

The Harpers Ferry bullion coin launched on June 7 and has sales of 34,200.

Bullion coins are also not sold directly to the public as the U.S. Mint reserves their selling to authorized distributors who buy them in bulk. They pay a premium of $9.75 per coin above spot, then resell them to coin and precious metal dealers and the public for a small amount over their melt value.

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Jp

I’m really quite surprised at how few bullion versions of this coin have been sold. I don’t purchase the bullion versions myself, only the “P” versions. I wonder if this will also reflect in the “P” versions?
I think the design of the coin and story behind this coin is really great. I would have thought it would have been a big seller.
I cannot figure out what makes some coin designs more attractive for buyers than others. Ones I swear would have been dogs turned out to be big sellers.

Seth Riesling

Jp –

I am surprised that more of these “P” Mint mark vapor-blast versions (called Specimen “SP” by the grading services) don’t sell. They are big, beautiful & low mintage. The bullion versions sold by dealers are priced around $125, but for just $25 more you can purchase the lower mintage Uncirculated “Specimen” version directly from the Mint with packaging & COA which the bullion versions do not come with (they are packed in plastic tubes of 10 coins all touching each other!)

-NumisDudeTX

Seth Riesling

Jp –

Another surprising thing is that the Mint’s 13 worldwide bullion coin Authorized Purchasers have not bought any of the 3 different 5-ounce silver bullion version “pucks” in about 6 weeks! Strange situation for sure. I guess their customers are just saying “No!”

Happy collecting Jp & everyone else!

-NumisDudeTX

Jp

Seth,
I agree. Go figure? I think the SP versions are better looking also. I also noticed that there have not been any sales of the others lately too.
Who knows?

Jeff

Two things to mention. Silver is a bit over $20.00 a oz., so the 5 oz coins cost 100.00, but the mint is selling them for 149.00 which is 50.00 profit per coin. Though most people don’t know the gold and silver spot prices are for raw condition. The blanks are made by private companies and then sent to the mints to be struck. I called the mint one time and to become a distributor, you must have 5 million in the bank just for silver and it must be free to use not including the money used to buy… Read more »

Seth Riesling

Jeff – That is how the Mint’s bullion coin Authorized Purchaser program has worked since the law was passed in 1985 for the silver & gold American Eagle coins that were first issued in 1986 (& for platinum in 1997). The strict requirements are necessary to provide a pipeline for distribution & a two-way market for the bullion version coins. You just have to shop around for the best price. There are only 13 worldwide US Mint Authorized Purchasers (9 in USA, 2 in Germany, 1 in Japan & 1 in Luxembourg). If you aren’t purchasing from one of these… Read more »

Jp

So, who are the big players?

Boz

They have plenty of available stock to sell purchased at lower cost, and marked way up to reflect rising spot prices. There is no reason to buy now.

But there will be a crunch if silver does not back off. Then they are faced with adding new stock that would have to be marked up even more, facing retail buyer resistence.

If silver gets back up above $25 then you see the market flooding with pawn and payday places rushing in to melt product in competition with commercial bullion.

Seth Riesling

Jp –

As of February 18, the 9 US Mint billion coin Authorized Purchasers in the USA are:

A-Mark Precious Metals (CA)

APMEX (OK)

Coins ‘N Things Inc. (MA)

Dillon Gage Inc. of Dallas (TX)

Fidelitrade Inc. (DE)

Jack Hunt Coin Broker Inc. (NY)

MTB (NY)

The Gold Center (IL)

Scotia Mocatta (NY)

-NumisDudeTX

Jp

Seth
Thats interesting. Im only familiar with APMEX. I dont buy much of anything from them as (most) times I find better prices elsewhere. But they do have a terrific assortment of product.
I will have to look those other ones up to see if they sell directly.
Thanks for the info.

joera

Seth
Thanks for the list of dealers. I was going to ask the same question Jp asked. I guess a lot of us coin collectors think the same and want to get the best products at the best price.
I like this design and plan on getting one. And now with the list of dealers I’ll be able to get it at the best price.

Seth Riesling

Glad to help with info. guys. I received the official list directly from the US Mint’s Disclosure Officer since I had never seen the whole list in print anywhere. It is interesting that there are only 13 companies in the program & 4 of them are overseas.
Good luck in your comparison shopping.

-NumisDudeTX