Okay, newbie question time. What is "counter-stamped"?
Russ
Posts: 48,514 ✭✭✭
I was crusing Two Cent pieces and came across this. It says counter-stamped EC Hatch-ZI71. Is that similar to chopmarking? Does it add any value to the coin? Or just coolness?
Russ, NCNE
Russ, NCNE
0
Comments
It is basically an initial/company name stamped onto a coin...
I think it got the name because the coins were "marked" specifically for use at that store (like a gift certificate). They marked circulating coins if they couldn't afford to make their own tokens.
Back to my paper...
Jeremy
B.
Edit: Russ, that's what the Heiress is holding in ther ANACS slab--a 1864 2 center.
B.
A Tax is a fine for doing good.
Russ, NCNE
al h.
in the general, overall coin market, it detracts, being viewed as damage. ie. anacs would net-grade that puppy as ag-2.
but there is an extremely narrow group of specialists who would buy this, including i believe q. david bowers. heck, i'd buy that coin myself, but it would be spreading out my interests too much. you need some of stack's old auction catalogs to get a good feel for this kind of stuff (i have some - extremely interesting reading).
bottom-line: 10 bucks is w/out question a bargain for that coin IF you think counterstamps like this are going to be an ongoing interest for ya.
K S
Anyone have any info on this one?
see? My Auctions "Got any 1800's gold?"
I'm not much of counterstamp collector, but I have attached two interesting examples.
"Free" in a large cent that is counterstamped, "Vote the land free." These pieces were used as an inexpensive campaign token for the anti-slavery Free Soil Party, which ran Martin Van Buren for president in 1848.
"LittleFool" is a Spanish milled dollar that was counterstamped with a small bust of King George III. Here the British converted a Spanish coin into emergincy British currency. It's been referred to as "a coin with the head of a fool on the neck of an ass."
Odd letters, numbers and unknown names are considered damage and greatly detract from the value.
Ray
It's the infamous potty penny with the Water Closet counterstamp VERY RARE and VALUABLE!!!
Obscurum per obscurius
Unfornately I don't own "littlefool." I saw it at a show; bid on it on Ebay; but did not win it. I did keep the picture however.
"Free" does belong to me. I collect 19th century presidential campaign medalets and tokens. It's really neat area. The only problem is that even the most common pieces are scarce by coin standards, and it's a life long search.
Obscurum per obscurius
K S
for five shillings to pass
Stamp the head of a fool
On the neck of an Ass
Chopmark- a mark placed on a coin to indicate an approval of genuineness or to guarantee the fineness.
Countermark- a mark or symbol used to offically revalue a coin or to mark it as being acceptable for circulation in a particular area. the stamped Spanish dollars would be an example of a countermark.
Counterstamp- punching on a coin used for advertising purposes, random letters or simply to test punches such as a testing of a silversmiths punch.
Many people use the term counterstamp for both counterstamp and countermark, sometimes for chopmarked as well.
I wish it was but it was sold as part of a Bust Half only sale around '94 or'95 (I have the catalog around here some place) where (if I remember correctly) it realized 4k-5k. This is the first time I have posted a picture of a coin I do not own.