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| 1 - 19 | $67.78 | $70.63 | $71.51 |
| 20 - 99 | $67.18 | $70.00 | $70.87 |
| 100 or more | $66.53 | $69.32 | $70.19 |
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The 1 oz Unity & Liberty Silver Round pairs two distinct strands of American symbolism in a single .999 fine silver design. The obverse shows Lady Liberty wielding a sword and an American flag beneath "E PLURIBUS UNUM"; the reverse depicts a fasces — the ancient bundle-of-rods symbol of unity and strength last seen on the U.S. Mercury Dime — wrapped by a coiled rattlesnake evoking Benjamin Franklin's 1754 "Join, or Die" colonial unity imagery. Produced by Cut Saw Mint, the round brings classical Roman symbolism together with distinctly American Revolutionary-era iconography in a single bullion piece.
Obverse
The obverse features Lady Liberty facing the viewer, wielding a sword in one hand and an American flag in the other, with "UNITY" inscribed and "E PLURIBUS UNUM" above.
Reverse
The reverse depicts a fasces wrapped by a coiled rattlesnake, set against a micro-engraved background, with "ONE TROY OUNCE" and ".999 FINE SILVER" inscribed.
The fasces on this round's reverse is an ancient symbol with a specific American numismatic precedent: it appeared on the reverse of the U.S. Mercury Dime from 1916 to 1945, where designer Adolph Weinman used it deliberately to represent unity, strength, and peace — the same idea behind its original Roman meaning, where a bundle of rods symbolized that individually weak elements become powerful when bound together. In the interest of accuracy, the symbol also carries a separate and later association: Benito Mussolini adopted the fasces as the emblem of Italian Fascism in 1919, three years after Weinman's coin debuted — a political appropriation unrelated to the symbol's original American numismatic use. The rattlesnake coiled around the fasces draws on an entirely different, older American tradition. Benjamin Franklin's 1754 "Join, or Die" political cartoon used a divided snake to argue that the colonies needed to unite against external threats — imagery later revived on the Gadsden flag, and carried forward here in the round's reverse design.
Cut Saw Mint produces privately minted precious metals bullion featuring original designs inspired by American history, symbolism, and culture. Its bullion products combine investment-grade precious metals with detailed artwork that appeals to both collectors and investors seeking distinctive private mint issues.
The 1 oz Unity & Liberty Silver Round pairs two distinct strands of American symbolism in a single .999 fine silver design. The obverse shows Lady Liberty wielding a sword and an American flag beneath "E PLURIBUS UNUM"; the reverse depicts a fasces — the ancient bundle-of-rods symbol of unity and strength last seen on the U.S. Mercury Dime — wrapped by a coiled rattlesnake evoking Benjamin Franklin's 1754 "Join, or Die" colonial unity imagery. Produced by Cut Saw Mint, the round brings classical Roman symbolism together with distinctly American Revolutionary-era iconography in a single bullion piece.
Obverse
The obverse features Lady Liberty facing the viewer, wielding a sword in one hand and an American flag in the other, with "UNITY" inscribed and "E PLURIBUS UNUM" above.
Reverse
The reverse depicts a fasces wrapped by a coiled rattlesnake, set against a micro-engraved background, with "ONE TROY OUNCE" and ".999 FINE SILVER" inscribed.
The fasces on this round's reverse is an ancient symbol with a specific American numismatic precedent: it appeared on the reverse of the U.S. Mercury Dime from 1916 to 1945, where designer Adolph Weinman used it deliberately to represent unity, strength, and peace — the same idea behind its original Roman meaning, where a bundle of rods symbolized that individually weak elements become powerful when bound together. In the interest of accuracy, the symbol also carries a separate and later association: Benito Mussolini adopted the fasces as the emblem of Italian Fascism in 1919, three years after Weinman's coin debuted — a political appropriation unrelated to the symbol's original American numismatic use. The rattlesnake coiled around the fasces draws on an entirely different, older American tradition. Benjamin Franklin's 1754 "Join, or Die" political cartoon used a divided snake to argue that the colonies needed to unite against external threats — imagery later revived on the Gadsden flag, and carried forward here in the round's reverse design.
Cut Saw Mint produces privately minted precious metals bullion featuring original designs inspired by American history, symbolism, and culture. Its bullion products combine investment-grade precious metals with detailed artwork that appeals to both collectors and investors seeking distinctive private mint issues.