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Augusta cannot guarantee that it will buyback any item it sells and cannot guarantee another retailer will purchase this premium coin. If you sell this coin to a retailer that does not recognize the premium value assessed by Augusta at the time of sale, then such sale may result in significant losses. Other retailers may not recognize the premium value that Augusta recognizes for this premium coin and may only be willing to pay as little as the melt value for this coin (the value of the precious metal that the coin contains). Pricing factors relevant to the premium value assessed by Augusta may include, but are not limited to, speculative interest, collector and investor demand, available supply, industry promotions, perceived value, economic conditions, and other factors we deem relevant in our sole discretion. This is a premium coin, meaning the coin’s price includes a premium value determined by Augusta based on factors other than, and in addition to, the value of the precious metal the coin contains.
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Walking Liberty half dollars were minted from 1916-1947, except for 1922, 1924-32. The mint mark is below the pine sapling for all coins struck after 1917, before which it was on the obverse, under the motto. The eagle perches on a rocky crag with pine sapling growing in the cracks. Weinman’s initials, AAW, are under its wing tip. The reverse has an American bald eagle with spread wings. The Walking Liberty half dollars are the last regular-issue silver coins with Lady Liberty, but the United States Mint copied the design for its silver American Eagle bullion coins. flag and walking toward a new day, carrying laurel and oak branches. The coin’s obverse (front) shows Lady Liberty cloaked in the U.S. Weinman was awarded the designs for both the dime and the half dollar. Woolley commissioned three noted sculptors to design three silver coins – the Mercury dime, the Standing Liberty quarter and the Walking Liberty half dollar (AKA “Liberty Walking" or “Walker). In 1915, United States Mint Director Robert W.
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