That's what I thought Dennis. Maybe a lot could be attributed to a poor strike, but I don't know how you could give this coin the benefit of the doubt in the absence of mint state luster, and this coin is described as having subdued surfaces with an overlay of gray patina, which sounds like another way of saying the coin does not retain any mint state luster. Besides, I would attribute some of the softness to wear. `01s have soft strikes, but this one is pathetic if in fact it has no wear.
All I know is I don't trust NGC anymore. The last few I have cracked out came back at least 2 grades lower. I tried crossing before the crackout so there were at least two attempts. MS61 usually ends up 58.
It's not the greatest pic, but that's how the 1901 comes, weak strike, a dull or dipped out looking steel grey lustre, very marginal eye appeal, etc. This date and a few others are some of the worst looking Morgans in the entire series. I've actually seen worse looking coins then that one in MS grades.
1901 Morgans are probably the most universally ugly Morgan dollars in grades above EF. Even a 1921-S is attractive once in a while, but not a 1901. If you sent this one to PCGS I would not be surprised if it came back in a body-bag for being thumbed. I don't see wear on the reverse, but the dark spot ("scene of the alleged crime") on the obverse on one of the first spots to see wear has me concerned. Perhaps it's only there to hide "cabinet friction" that is acceptible in small amounts on sub-63 Morgan dollars.
On the reverse, in particular, I see areas that look more like wear than strike to me:
1) Left wingtip 2) The "A" in "DOLLAR" looks wrong compared to the other letters. 3) I can't tell if it's just reflected light, but there looks like wear on the inside of the wings.
On the obverse:
1) The top of the bonnet looks worn. 2) Ms. Liberty is definitely having a bad hair day. 3) There appears to be details left in the cotton on her head and in the leaves, leading me to think that it's not such a weak strike, after all. At least - not enough to justify the appearance of the rest of the coin.
If you haven't noticed, I'm single and miserable and I've got four albums of bitching about it that I would offer as proof.
Lousy pics; remind me of Goldberg catalogue ones that drive me nuts. Strike is weak which itself should limit the grade to 63. Looks like an old dipping, though that could just be the image. The neck looks rubbed. I am guessing it is a slider that got in an MS slab.
As a date 1901-P dollars are noted for weak strikes and poor luster. It's hard to understand why, after years of making great to decent dollars, the Philadelphia mint went south like this, but they did.
This is coin that only a Morgan dollar lover can love. It is a real Choice Unc., and although it might have been dipped, which could have dulled it a little, it probably had no more luster when it dropped from the dies than what it has now.
A reasonable alternative is to look for a very choice AU-58. I've seen them around, and they can look very nice in a Mint State Morgan set. You will also save a few thousand bucks too, although you need to gravitate toward the Gray Sheet MS-60 price, which is over $1,000. You find anything decent for the AU-50 price, which is around $300.
P.S. Those are shopping for 1895-O dollars will find much the same thing. Many Mint State graded pieces are ugly and don't look as nice as some of the really choice AU pices.
Retired dealer and avid collector of U.S. type coins, 19th century presidential campaign medalets and selected medals. In recent years I have been working on a set of British coins - at least one coin from each king or queen who issued pieces that are collectible. I am also collecting at least one coin for each Roman emperor from Julius Caesar to ... ?
and away we go...................again....................with everyone who knows you can't accurately grade from an online picture grading from an online picture. apparently the guys who know the series and the problematic 1901-P issue accept the worded description and judge the picture accordingly.
my impression of the auction and the coin is that the lighting for the photograph is terrible and the result is a coin which is poorly represented. Superior has it's plethora of problems, don't they?? shoddy listing at eBay with many documented mistakes and what appears to be lackluster in-house record keeping and customer relations. lately they would seem to need a good, top notch photographer for their many listings.
who's up for the job?? if i had the skill, the initiative and the freedom to move i'd certainly have my resume in the mail along with a portfolia and solid references. this is a job waiting to happen for the right forum member.
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Keeper of the VAM Catalog • Professional Coin Imaging • Prime Number Set • World Coins in Early America • British Trade Dollars • Variety Attribution
1) Left wingtip
2) The "A" in "DOLLAR" looks wrong compared to the other letters.
3) I can't tell if it's just reflected light, but there looks like wear on the inside of the wings.
On the obverse:
1) The top of the bonnet looks worn.
2) Ms. Liberty is definitely having a bad hair day.
3) There appears to be details left in the cotton on her head and in the leaves, leading me to think that it's not such a weak strike, after all. At least - not enough to justify the appearance of the rest of the coin.
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As a date 1901-P dollars are noted for weak strikes and poor luster. It's hard to understand why, after years of making great to decent dollars, the Philadelphia mint went south like this, but they did.
This is coin that only a Morgan dollar lover can love. It is a real Choice Unc., and although it might have been dipped, which could have dulled it a little, it probably had no more luster when it dropped from the dies than what it has now.
A reasonable alternative is to look for a very choice AU-58. I've seen them around, and they can look very nice in a Mint State Morgan set. You will also save a few thousand bucks too, although you need to gravitate toward the Gray Sheet MS-60 price, which is over $1,000. You find anything decent for the AU-50 price, which is around $300.
P.S. Those are shopping for 1895-O dollars will find much the same thing. Many Mint State graded pieces are ugly and don't look as nice as some of the really choice AU pices.
my impression of the auction and the coin is that the lighting for the photograph is terrible and the result is a coin which is poorly represented. Superior has it's plethora of problems, don't they?? shoddy listing at eBay with many documented mistakes and what appears to be lackluster in-house record keeping and customer relations. lately they would seem to need a good, top notch photographer for their many listings.
who's up for the job?? if i had the skill, the initiative and the freedom to move i'd certainly have my resume in the mail along with a portfolia and solid references. this is a job waiting to happen for the right forum member.
Put an O mint mark on it and it probably makes 63 or even possibly 64 on a good day.
<< <i>Wow! That coin sure doesn't photograph well. It looks more like AU58. >>
I Concur with that Opinion!
TorinoCobra71