| Production Year | 1997 |
| Population MS 69 | Coming soon |
| Population MS 70 | Coming soon |
| Total Max Population | 20,000 |
The Uncirculated version of First Spouse Abigail Adams came out in 2007 and I will keep up with the coins that has been slab by PCGS and NCG to give the readers of this site the ability to follow the population numbers in this First Spouse series coins.
| Year Issued | 2007 |
| Population PR69DCAM | Coming soon |
| Population PR70DCAM | Coming soon |
| Total Max Population Proof | 20,000 Coins |
The first 4 coins of the First Spouse Series sold out from the US mint in 3 hours after becoming available.The coin is produced in an uncirculated version and a proof version both versions are on this site. The US. Mint will release a maximum of 20,000 coins of each type and since First Spouse Abigail Adams was sold out in 3hours its safe to say that probably all 20,000 of each type MS and Proof has been released.
Notes about the coin:
Abigail Smith was born in Weymouth, Massachusetts, in 1744. As was customary for the time, Abigail did not receive formal education, but her quick mind and her curiosity for the world around her were nurtured in her family's library, and her desire to read and learn was encouraged. She married John Adams, a young Harvard-educated attorney in 1764, and lived with him in Braintree, Massachusetts, while he built a successful law practice.
She joined him in Europe from 1784 to 1788 as he served as an American diplomat in France and as the first United States Minister to Great Britain. The couple returned to Massachusetts in 1788. After her husband became President, they were the first couple to live in the White House after they arrived in Washington in November 1800. Abigail returned to Braintree in 1801, now called Quincy, where she lived until her death in 1818.
Reverse Design
Because of John Adams' commitment to the cause of colonial independence, he and Abigail were often separated for lengthy periods of time—she in Massachusetts, and he in Philadelphia. Letters they wrote to each other during the Revolution and the formation of the United States are a mirror of the intellectual vigor of the times. He himself acknowledged that she had as much political insight as any of his colleagues, and that he valued her counsel above all others, combined with the affection and loyalty of her friendship. In one of her most memorable letters, Abigail Adams requested that her husband John "remember the ladies" when creating the framework for the new Republic.
| Production Year | 2008 |
| Population PR69DCAM | Coming Soon |
| Population PR70DCAM | Coming Soon |
| Total Max Population Proof | 4,554 as of October 2008 |
First Spouse Louisa Adams our 6th first lady in the white house here from the US Mint in Proof condition. Very nice coin
Louisa Adams First Spouse $10 Gold Coin
First Lady, 1825–1829
The only first lady to be born outside the U.S., Louisa Catherine Johnson was born in 1775 in London to an American father and British mother. The family moved to France when she was three, where she completed her education. She met John Quincy Adams while he was serving in a diplomatic post in London and they married in 1797. Her first time on American soil came in 1801 when John Quincy was called back from diplomatic service by President Jefferson. She finally met her in-laws, former president John Adams and the formidable Abigail Adams, at that time.
Louisa Adams was an accomplished musician whose talents included singing, playing the harp and piano, and composing. A prolific author, she penned both poetry and drama. She authored a play titled Suspicion, or Persecuted Innocence while she served as first lady, in which she stressed the strengths of women. She was the first first lady to write her memoirs, entitled Adventures of a Nobody.
Reverse Design
For nearly six years, from 1809–1815, Louisa and John Quincy Adams lived as American diplomats in the Russian capital of St. Petersburg. In 1814, John Quincy was summoned to The Hague to participate in peace talks to end the War of 1812. In 1815, she and her 8-year-old son Charles began an arduous journey across much of Europe to join her husband in Paris. While alone in Russia, Louisa not only managed the family’s affairs, but her courage and linguistic talents helped the two of them find safe passage through unfamiliar and often dangerous lands.
Here are the new release mintage of the First Spouse $10 gold spouse coin, these numbers will change over time and I will publish new numbers. As you can see the coins are not selling as well as the mint thought. That should be a buying opportunity for collectors as the value of these coins with lower population numbers should go up faster.
First Spouse UNC. Proof
| Martha Washington | 20,000 | 20,000 |
| Abigail Adams | 20,000 | 20,000 |
| Thomas Jefferson’s Liberty | 20,000 | 20,000 |
| Dolley Madison | 12,742 | 18,105 |
| Elizabeth Monroe | 4,191 | 7,244 |
| Louisa Adams | 2,663 | 4,651 |
| Andrew Jackson’s Liberty | 2,423 | 4,183 |