Coins with history and character.
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Got this in this week. When I look at it, I can't help wondering who has owned it over the years. Maybe a soldier after a valiant battle bought a meal or a shave? Not much in the value department, of course, but cool I think.
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Russ, NCNE
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We'll use our hands and hearts and if we must we'll use our heads.
K S
<< <i>don't think it would have bought a meal or a shave though. >>
HMM...maybe he would have had to cough up a half dime?
Or, perhaps an entire ten cents?
I kind of like these old coins.
Russ, NCNE
But proof JFKs still RULE!!!
"Ask, and it shall be given you; seek, and ye shall find; knock, and it shall be opened unto you." -Luke 11:9
"Hear, O Israel: The LORD our God is one LORD: And thou shalt love the LORD thy God with all thine heart, and with all thy soul, and with all thy might." -Deut. 6:4-5
"For the LORD is our judge, the LORD is our lawgiver, the LORD is our king; He will save us." -Isaiah 33:22
back to the coin at hand, i like the symbolism of the shield on it and on the nickels of that era. no doubt influenced by all the turbulence of the war. the statement i see is a safeguard of liberty. coins rock!!
al h.
"Ask, and it shall be given you; seek, and ye shall find; knock, and it shall be opened unto you." -Luke 11:9
"Hear, O Israel: The LORD our God is one LORD: And thou shalt love the LORD thy God with all thine heart, and with all thy soul, and with all thy might." -Deut. 6:4-5
"For the LORD is our judge, the LORD is our lawgiver, the LORD is our king; He will save us." -Isaiah 33:22
Russ, NCNE
didn't they use the new orleans mint for awhile and one other one on the east coast?? there's alot of confederate currency floating around but i don't think i've ever seen any coins. do you have something you can post a picture of?
al h.
I'd like to believe that this is a metaphor of our losing our spirtuality and religion quickly in time of war.
EVP
How does one get a hater to stop hating?
I can be reached at evillageprowler@gmail.com
Actually, it's the WE that wears flat. Considering the era of the coin and the war in which were were engaged at the time, the metaphor is profound.
Russ, NCNE
Cameron Kiefer
What the heck was I on before? Anyway, I like Russ' attempt to cover for me on the metaphor front!
EVP
How does one get a hater to stop hating?
I can be reached at evillageprowler@gmail.com
As far as I understand, the 1861 Confederate Cents were made in Philadelphia, but the maker, Mr. Lovett, apparantly didn't deliver any coins, but rather hid them and the dies in his cellar for fear of arrest for aiding the enemy. The Redbook lists total mintage at 12. Later, a Capt. Haseltine bought the dies, and made a few restrikes in copper, gold and silver (74 total). In 1960 the dies were copied and more copies were made. I have one of those, but they aren't worth much. You can look in the Redbook for more info and pictures, since I don't have any scans.
the 1861 Confederate Half Dollar is another interesting story. Apparantly 500 genuine half dollars from the New Orleans mint had their reverses planed off and stamped with the Confederate die. 4 original half dollars were struck on a hand press, using original silver half dollar planchets, and these were given to a few dignitaries. Lack of bullion is cited as the main reason for not minting more of these. Info from the Redbook.
"Ask, and it shall be given you; seek, and ye shall find; knock, and it shall be opened unto you." -Luke 11:9
"Hear, O Israel: The LORD our God is one LORD: And thou shalt love the LORD thy God with all thine heart, and with all thy soul, and with all thy might." -Deut. 6:4-5
"For the LORD is our judge, the LORD is our lawgiver, the LORD is our king; He will save us." -Isaiah 33:22
Was reading an old letter postmarked 1915 from my Dad to his mom ; he was 16 at the time and he mentioned that his brother got his shoe fixed for a nickle... was probably the V nickel ; could have been a new Buffalo. They had just moved to the big city to go to school...Albany ! He wrote that he was homesick ..for about 15 minutes then they went out to dinner !
Ken
The more I read your threads the more impressed i become with your work, dedication and love of the "Coin".. and not the money !
THe beauty of a slightly worn coin is not to be underestimated ! The two cent piece even takes on a new perspective with the "We" worn off is ceases to be a statement and is now a plea or command ! In God, Trust !
Thanks for your expertise and showing and sharing...
Ken
I love your collection too. For fun, I thought I'd show you the 332 A.D. mint set I'm conserving in olive oil. Talk about history! Old Constantinius is on the porous planchet.
and it sets us apart from practitioners and consultants. Gregor
Go back and read the Redbook again. You have the infomation about the cent right but you are mixing information on the half dollar between the genuine and the Scott restrikes.
Confederate coinage in brief. After Louisiana seceded the State took over the New Orleans mint and struck 1.24 million half dollars using the regular Seated Liberty dies. Then the Confederacy took it over and struck 962,633 half dollars also from the regular dies. Later the Confederacy created a die with their own seal and combined it with a seated Liberty obverse to strike four pattern half dollars. (These were the pieces given to the VIP's) After the war Scott acquired the Confederate die and used it to strike 500 pieces in white metal and restrike 500 1861-O half dollars. Two pieces were strurk without planing off the coins reverse but too much of the original design showed so the other 498 were planed. The Confederate die was used as the hammer die and the coins were placed face down on a soft brass plate to minimize the crushing of the obverse design. these 500 restrikes were sold by subscription for $2 each. Scott claimed a rapid sellout but he actually had stocks of the restrikes and it took him several years to actually move all of them.
The Confederacy also struck an unknown but small number of gold dollars in 1861 at the mint in Dahlonaga using the Union dies that had been sent there before the start of hostilities. And at the Charlotte mint 887 half eagles were struck. (The Union struck 5,992 half eagles using the same dies.)
And of course you know about the cent.
The Tale of One Young Cherry-Picker
Mystery novel fans take heart -- the story of the particular specimen featured here has more turns than an Agatha Christie novel. Purchased on the West Coast at a small, club-sponsored show, it would have been the most unlikely of venues for a major discovery. After all, cherry-pickers require lots of coins to examine, whereas this show offered relatively few coins to choose from.
Yet there it was, a coin viewed by several hundred potential buyers, all of whom passed it by. Marked "1878 7/8-TF" on the flip (the dealer thought it was the common VAM 33), the coin was overgraded at MS63, but this young collector, with his burgeoning interest in silver dollar varieties, bought the coin anyway. He said later that he had "felt" there was something different about this coin! Later, after a close inspection and a comparison with pictures in the VAM Book, the collector contacted the SSDC to corroborate his attribution. Was this the famous VAM 44? It sure was. Imagine, one of the premier coins in VAM collecting was acquired without either the dealer or the collector knowing its true identity!
Having been contacted, there was lots of good news and a little bad news to report. The good news was that the lucky collector had indeed hit a home run. Without question, this Mark McGwire long ball not only carried the outfield wall, but landed in another country! The only issue was the grade. It appeared to this conservative grader to be an AU58. Would it stretch to an MS60? Was that a trace of wear or a touch of flatness about Liberty's ear. The lustre was full, but did it have enough "pizzazz" to be a "new" coin? Hey, why fret? It was the VAM collector's find of a lifetime in either case.
The moral of the story? Cherry-picker's dreams can, and do, come true. This VAM 44, which was originally purchased for less than $100, subsequently sold in an SSDC Mail Auction for $2400! The collector who acquired this ultra-rare specimen later called to say that this was the happy ending to his dream of completing a 7/8-TF Set, a feat duplicated by less than a dozen numismatists worldwide. And the consignor, who couldn't help but write the Society about the details of his adventure, was particularly thrilled with the results. And why not? There's something magical about spinning straw into gold!
That is a great story! I recently started a set of circulated 3-cent nickels, and since the Dansco album also included a page for 2-cent pieces, I started them too (both sets can each fit on a single page). I wanted the circulated coins to enjoy them for what they were, little time capsules of our history, I didn't want to get caught up in the MS-?? RD, RB, BN thing, I just want nice coins with honest wear and they are pretty inexpensive for the history they contain. I really have no idea what you could buy for 2c or 3c back then, but I am guessing that they must have been like nickels were in the 1920s, 1930s and 1940s, where a lot of things cost a nickel. Maybe someone could buy some feed for their horse as they went into a saloon for a drink, or maybe they could buy a plate of chop suey for the thousands of Chinese immigrants that built the railroad, or maybe it was like a dream come true for a young Teddy Roosevelt in a candy store in New York. Or maybe they were just oddball denominations that people just saved in coffee cans like we do with half dollars and Sacagaweas today? That may be true, but from the look of some of these coins, I'd say that a lot of them were spent many, many times.
Thanks for your extra info.
How many 1860-O dimes do you think still exist? I have one. Are they underpriced?
"Ask, and it shall be given you; seek, and ye shall find; knock, and it shall be opened unto you." -Luke 11:9
"Hear, O Israel: The LORD our God is one LORD: And thou shalt love the LORD thy God with all thine heart, and with all thy soul, and with all thy might." -Deut. 6:4-5
"For the LORD is our judge, the LORD is our lawgiver, the LORD is our king; He will save us." -Isaiah 33:22
This is a piece I picked up fairly recently:
If only it could talk.
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I don't know how many 1860-O dimes are out there but I do know that it is a popular target for fakes. The genuine has a medium size date and a small O mintmark and if you look on the shield above the banner the upper continuation of the vertical stripes is in only five lines. (Many fakes are made by altering 1890 coins and they have large dates and mintmarks and the stripes are in three groups of two lines.)
Camelot