California's fractional gold pieces occupy a strange legal gray area — they were never officially sanctioned currency, yet they circulated freely throughout the state for decades because small-denomination coinage was chronically scarce in the West. The 1871 issues came well after the acute shortages of the Gold Rush years, produced largely for the tourist and souvenir trade by private makers in San Francisco and surrounding areas.
A California law passed in 1883 finally banned their manufacture, at which point counterfeit versions — struck in base metal and gold-plated — proliferated so aggressively that genuine pre-ban pieces now require careful specific gravity testing to authenticate.
California's fractional gold pieces occupy a strange legal gray area — they were never officially sanctioned currency, yet they circulated freely throughout the state for decades because small-denomination coinage was chronically scarce in the West. The 1871 issues came well after the acute shortages of the Gold Rush years, produced largely for the tourist and souvenir trade by private makers in San Francisco and surrounding areas.
A California law passed in 1883 finally banned their manufacture, at which point counterfeit versions — struck in base metal and gold-plated — proliferated so aggressively that genuine pre-ban pieces now require careful specific gravity testing to authenticate.