Marsh-Billings-Rockefeller National Historical Park is located in Woodstock, Vermont. The 2020 Silver ATB (Marsh-Billings-Rockefeller Design) coin is the fourth release of 2020 in the U.S. Mint's popular 5 oz Silver bullion America the Beautiful 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: On the right, a young girl finishes planting a Norway spruce seedling next to the trunk of another tree on the opposite side.
- Guaranteed by the U.S. Mint.
The America the Beautiful series will include 56 coins. Protect your 2020 5 oz Silver ATB (Marsh-Billings-Rockefeller Design) coin in style by adding a beautiful
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Add this attractive 2020 Silver America The Beautiful (Marsh-Billings-Rockefeller National Historical Park Design) coin to your collection today!
America the Beautiful Coins
The Marsh-Billings-Rockefeller National Historical Park Silver ATB coin is the 54
th release of 56 coins in the America the Beautiful Silver coin series. Also called America the Beautiful quarters, these coins are sought after by investors for their .999 fine Silver content and desired by collectors for their artistic value. The America the Beautiful 5 oz Silver coin series began in 2010 to commemorate national parks from each U.S. state and territory. The U.S. Mint does not sell its bullion coins directly to the public. Instead, they distribute their coins to only a handful of authorized purchasers, like APMEX, who then sell the coins to the public.
Marsh-Billings-Rockefeller National Historical Park
The Marsh-Billings-Rockefeller National Historical Park is located near Woodstock village in Vermont and is the only park of the U.S. National Park System that is based within the state. The property is named in honor of its past owners, who made it what it is today. Charles Marsh, a highly successful lawyer in Vermont, built the original portion of the main house in 1805, where he raised his family. His son followed his footsteps as an attorney with political ambitions. He laid the foundations for the conservation movement in the United States with the 1864 publication of Man and Nature, or the Physical Geography as Modified by Human Behavior. In 1869 the 246-acre property was purchased by Frederick H. Billings, who made additions to the main house and built it up into the final Victorian style it has today. At the same time, he established a managed forest and dairy farm. Billing's granddaughter Mary French Rockefeller and her husband, Laurance Rockefeller, eventually transferred ownership to the U.S. federal government in 1992 and the property was designated a National Historic Landmark.