Buy 2016 5 oz Ag ATB Cumberland Gap Nat. Hist. Park

Price:   $196.97  $65.66-67%

  • Model: 93721
  • 1000 Units in Stock

(0 reviews)
(complete orders today,deliverd around 05/12/2024)
  • Shipping time
    About 5-7 days.
  • means of transportation
    EMS,TNT,UPS,DHL,FEDX,HK AIR
  • Payment
    Paypal,Western Union, MoneyGram
  • Email us
    [email protected]
  • New Products
    Buy 35% Silver War Nickels $200 Face Value Bag
    $891.00  $99.00-89%
    Buy 1926-S Buffalo Nickel VF
    $134.99  $45.00-67%
    Buy 1920-S Buffalo Nickel VF
    $107.99  $36.00-67%
    Buy 1917-S Buffalo Nickel Fine
    $71.99  $24.00-67%
    • Details
    Cumberland Gap National Historical Park in Kentucky is the second release in 2016 of the U.S. Mint's popular America the Beautiful Silver coin series.

    Coin Highlights:
    • Contains 5 oz of .999 fine Silver.
    • Individual coins come in capsules. Multiples of 10 come in mint-issued tubes without capsules. Orders of 100 come in mint-issued monster boxes also without capsules.
    • Eligible for Precious Metals IRAs.
    • Obverse: Portrait of George Washington originally designed by John Flanagan, with the inscriptions of "United States of America", "Liberty", "In God We Trust" and "Quarter Dollar".
    • Reverse: An early frontiersman gazing across the Cumberland Gap to the West.
    • Guaranteed by the U.S. Mint.

    Protect your Silver America The Beautiful coin in style by adding a beautiful display box to your order.

    These coins are sought after by investors for their .999 fine Silver content, and demanded by collectors for their artistic value. Add this attractive coin to your collection today!

    Cumberland Gap

    Cumberland Gap National Historical Park, Kentucky was chosen for the America The Beautiful series as it honors a site where Native Americans and settlers alike traveled through a break in the Appalachian Mountains. After the Revolutionary War, people wanted to settle west, and used the Cumberland Gap as a way to get through the Appalachian Mountains. Eventually a railroad was built and it became strategically important to both the North and South during the Civil War. In 1940, Cumberland Gap won National Park status in Kentucky as it was a vital in the country
    Similar Products