I got an intriguing private message last week.

A member sent me this message last week:
Dear Sir or Lord,
Please send exactly $1 to the following address. That way I will break even on what I'm sending to you and then can "return a favor":
[name and address]
This is not a scam or crank mail. Please just do it.
Best regards,
Rick
How would you have responded?
I'll tell you what I did. I got a dollar bill out of my wallet and mailed it to the address provided. I mean, how could I not, right?
Rick (whose username was noddingly familiar to me but not extremely so) definitely knew how to pique my interest.
But after a couple of days, I all but forgot the whole thing.
Then last night I got another message from him.
You're probably wondering what this is all about. I thought I'd have some fun, ask for $1 and surprise you but now wonder if that's coming off as a bit too weird from your perspective so I'll explain what I'm doing.
[ ... ]
So he explained.
And wow, I am indeed surprised.
He need not have worried. While the $1 request was unusual, I thought it was fun.
Now that I've heard what my mystery purchase is, I wish I had sent him a silver dollar, at least!
I anticipate this coin to arrive today; perhaps within the hour.
And I'm excited about that.
Care to guess what it is? I'll throw out some hints.
• It is an old United States Type coin.
• One side of it was planed off and re-engraved as a love token, sometime in the 19th century, in a style consistent with the early- to mid-1800s. Rick apparently learned of my enthusiasm for love tokens.
• It is worth considerably more than the $1.55 (dollar bill + stamp) I gambled on it.
Comments
Intriguing.
Looking forward seeing it.
"If I say something in the woods and my wife isn't there to hear it.....am I still wrong?"
My Washington Quarter Registry set...in progress
I look forward to seeing it LordM.... (by the way, I was not the 'Rick' in the event). Cheers, RickO
Interesting thread.
While we are discussing love tokens, check this out.
Here's one done on a quarter-eagle.
That's a better host coin, but still not all that unusual.
Until you look at the other side. Wow.
That is NOT the coin Rick is sending me. It's on eBay. What's coming is not gold - but my mystery purhase is interesting, in a similar kind of way.
Wow!
The LT he is sending is also a "wow", though not as big a wow as one done on an 1825 quarter-eagle.
A pretty darned big "wow" for a buck-fifty-five investment, though.
Please let us know when you have it in hand.
Below is the seller's picture of the engraved side of the piece I should be getting (tomorrow, maybe- it wasnt in today's mail.)
Pretty standard 19th century engraving. Script initials. That's common. The style is early- to mid-1800s. Probably pre-Civil War.
Not the best pic. Big stupid Photobucket watermark. Kinda dark, but that's how the coin is toned.
Usually, with a love token, the engraving is what counts. But in this case, that's not the interesting side.
This sounds intriguing! I don’t know if you have a significant other, but if so, do they know you’re receiving love tokens from random near strangers on a shady coin message board on the interwebs?

Collector of randomness. Photographer at PCGS. Lover of Harry Potter.
Ladymarcovan is cool with it.
The coin is silver.
The obverse is the side which got re-engraved (as seen above).
But despite the obverse being gone, the coin is dateable to a single year/variety. (And that's the interesting part.)
Let see!
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The reason for the $1 price is because that is what Rick himself paid for it, in a lucky cherrypick many years ago. Hence his "break even" comment.
I got the same message but from a member named Bruce...
Although he was asking for me to send $1,000,000.00 so he could break even
I always thought "we" considered it poor form to share any Private Messages?? is that still true??
Another clue:
What is the most common denomination of US coin used as a host for 19th century love tokens?
Suspense to see it in-hand from @lordmarcovan!
Why, Liberty Seated Dimes of course!
I like them on seated quarters and bust halves.
You're right about Seated dimes being the most common type used as love token hosts.
But I didn't say type.
I said denomination.
So you're halfway right.
I sent a similar request to my ex for back child support. Told her I would ensure the kids turned out alright. The message went unanswered, 7 grandkids ago.
Cool thread.
@CircCam what is your avatar coin? It looks awesome.
Rick, what can I get for $5.00?
I'm guessing it's on a Bust Quarter!
The obverse of the coin is the side I have shown, which got removed in the process of the love token engraving.
But the coin is dateable to one specific year and variety, by the reverse alone (which has decent VG details, as you'll see later).
The answer can be found if you look long enough into the crystal ball ...
Another obscure clue, hidden in some of these pictures of my daughter's 2017 birthday party.
(It's kinda like reading one of those funky captchas.)
1875-S Twenty Cent piece?
1916 SLQ?
10-4,
My Instagram picturesErik
My registry sets
That would make it a 20c piece.
Keeper of the VAM Catalog • Professional Coin Imaging • Prime Number Set • World Coins in Early America • British Trade Dollars • Variety Attribution
Nope. Excellent guess, though, since an S-mint 20c piece would be dateable to 1875 by the reverse alone. But it is not a 20c piece.
That would be cool, but this coin got engraved before Abe Lincoln died, most likely.
Good guess, but no. It is not a Seated dime, nor is it a 20c piece.
Not a trime. Not a SLQ, 1916 or otherwise.
Stare into the crystal ball I posted above. Examine the pictures of my daughter's birthday party.
The clues are there. Cryptic, but there.
I think @ElmerFusterpuck went for the 1916 SLQ based on the clue in those birthday party pix.
Wrong answer, but barking up the right tree in terms of numerical clues.
Now he just needs to look into that crystal ball a little more closely...
They solved the riddle over on CoinTalk. I thought for sure the Type coin gurus here would crack it first.
Have not seen the answer. But will take a guess at a 16 star reverse 1798 dime.
But that must be wrong because that is too good of a deal.
"To Be Esteemed Be Useful" - 1792 Birch Cent --- "I personally think we developed language because of our deep need to complain." - Lily Tomlin
1853 Arrows & Rays quarter? But if so how did Rick get it for $1?
it's crackers to slip a rozzer the dropsy in snide
@WinLoseWin becomes "WinWinWin" today.
Winner, winner, chicken dinner (plus bragging rights).
It is an AMAZING deal, isn't it? Obviously from an extremely generous person! I will have to "pay it forward" some.
The cryptic clues?
The crystal ball had stars.
"16" on the birthday balloons.
16 stars. To my knowledge, only one US silver coin had 16 stars on the reverse: the 1798/7 dime.
(Some 1797 dimes had 16 stars, but only on the obverse, since those had the Small Eagle reverse instead of the Heraldic Eagle seen here.)
Will post better pix when it arrives. Perhaps tomorrow.
I thought stars when I saw the crystal ball but the only coin I could think of without looking at a reference book was the 1836 Gobrecht dollar. I thought, no way.
it's crackers to slip a rozzer the dropsy in snide
Oh, that would have been amazing! But it seems the "starry" variant of the Gobrecht dollars had 26 stars around the eagle. (I had to look that up.)
Wow! Great deal.
Your clues led me to figure it had to be a dime. With no date visible and the stars and 16 in the photos, looked at the Red Book and this looked like a possibility.
Any idea of the circumstances of the original $1 purchase?
Guessing it had to be a non-coin person who thought it a cheap button or token. Maybe a flea market or antique store.
"To Be Esteemed Be Useful" - 1792 Birch Cent --- "I personally think we developed language because of our deep need to complain." - Lily Tomlin
Rick said I gave him his first "you suck" award on the forums when he first posted about it. That was in 2007. He remembered the compliment, 12 years later!
I don't think he will mind my sharing what I have, so far - as a way of showing my genuine enthusiasm for what is really an extremely kind gift- but I chose to post only his first name and not tag his username.
So I'll link him to this thread but that way it's up to him whether or not he wants to weigh in. Yes, I have quoted some snippets of our PMs, but will respect the privacy of his identity if he wants.
Here's the basic backstory:
last year a local coin shop had a 20c love token, the reverse was obliterated. Knowing my thing for the double dimes, he challenged me to identify it. It was a 1875-CC, BF-3 or BF-4.
I'm pretty stoked.
Since I feel an obligation to "pay it forward" some, there WILL be a celebratory giveaway when the coin arrives.
Above and beyond my regular monthly giveaway (which I just posted, BTW).
There will be gold. Old gold. Not big, high-dollar gold, but fun stuff.
More on this later.
I've had some really cool LTs, but never on a 20c host coin. I really like those. One just never crossed my path at the right time.
Ah, so you did. :-)
My first DBH, PCGS F15. Thanks!
@CircCam - you know who to contact first when you upgrade that DBH and are ready to part with it...
Hard to believe your little girl is 16. Time flies.
Neat love token.
Indeed it does. Those were old pictures. She'll be eighteen in the fall, and a high school senior. Already making college plans.