Reference Price
$2.25-$13.87
The actual value of the coin may differ depending on its condition, luster, rarity, and other factors. This is a rough estimation.
The actual value of the coin may differ depending on its condition, luster, rarity, and other factors. This is a rough estimation.
Hiawatha Belt and five arrows bound together representing unity with the inscription Haudenosaunee - the word the Iroquois Confederacy calls themselves. The word means People of the Long House. Another inscription is found along the lower edge of the reverse spelling Great Law of Peace (an English translation of Gayanashagowa, the Iroquois Confederacy constitution). The Great Law of Peace was used as a model for the Constitution of the United States. The four links on the belt are meant to symbolize four of the Five Nations of the Iroquois Confederacy, namely the Mohawk, Oneida, Cayuga and Seneca Nations. The Eastern White Pine tree in the middle of the belt represents the fifth Nation, the Onondaga, and is a depiction of the Tree of Peace.
Thomas Cleveland, Charles Lessie Vickers
n/a
Sacagawea (1788-1812), a Shoshone Native American, a translator and a guide to the Lewis and Clark expedition, holding a child
Glenna Goodacre
n/a
Engraved with date, mintmark, and a motto. 13 stars represent the first states in the country when it was created in 1776.
Obverse:
LIBERTY IN GOD WE TRUST GG
Reverse:
UNITED STATES OF AMERICA $1 TC CLV HAUDENOSAUNEE GREAT LAW OF PEACE
Manganese brass clad copper