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  • Billet7Billet7 Posts: 4,923 ✭✭✭
    I used to have one of those! They're really cool if you ask me! Dramatic to say the least.
  • STONESTONE Posts: 15,275
    1832 O-101a (R1) die marriage. Looks AU-53, maybe 55

    I suppose it's a score if you picked it up for like $75, but I don't think it's worth much over $250
  • richardshipprichardshipp Posts: 5,647 ✭✭✭
    Looks nice to me. Congrats.


  • << <i>1832 O-101a (R1) die marriage. Looks AU-53, maybe 55

    I suppose it's a score if you picked it up for like $75, but I don't think it's worth much over $250 >>



    Really? Coinfacts lists it as $900 in AU-55 with the most recent sale for a PCGS graded AU-55 being at Stacks/Bowers in Baltimore in March 2011 ending at $1265.
  • astroratastrorat Posts: 9,221 ✭✭✭✭✭


    << <i>

    << <i>1832 O-101a (R1) die marriage. Looks AU-53, maybe 55

    I suppose it's a score if you picked it up for like $75, but I don't think it's worth much over $250 >>



    Really? Coinfacts lists it as $900 in AU-55 with the most recent sale for a PCGS graded AU-55 being at Stacks/Bowers in Baltimore in March 2011 ending at $1265. >>

    There are more complete pricing guides than Coinfacts for Capped Bust halves, such as Steve Herrman's price reports and Dave Rutherford's site: http://www.busthalfprices.com

    A more recent (than Coinfacts) report of a sales of an 1832 O-101a PCGS slabbed example was from August 2011 where a PCGS-53 brought $450. An ANACS-55 example sold for $310 in April 2011. There likely were other factors that lead to the extraordinary price realized for the Stacks/Baltimore example. Did it have a provenance that Bust Half Nuts want? Was it undergraded? Was it misattributed and actually a rarer variety.

    IF, and that's not a given (as the coin looks cleaned to me), the coin resided in an AU-graded PCGS holder, I doubt it would sell in an open market for over $400. Outside a slab, if it sold for over $300 I would be stunned into silence. Consider that it would cost you upwards of $50-60 (or more) to submit a single CBH valued at over $300 to PCGS to grade (including postage and insurance both ways and all fees).

    The 1832 O-101 and 1832 O-101a are common coins, they are just in the Redbook and as a result there are more collectors looking for them. If you keep your eye open, you will see these about as often as mustard stains on a coin dealer's middle-aged paunch.

    With all that written ... I hope the coin sparks an interest in the CBH series for you! It's a challenging series, but a lot of fun.


    Edited for spelling...
    Numismatist Ordinaire
    See http://www.doubledimes.com for a free online reference for US twenty-cent pieces

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