Coins About As Rare As The 1913 Liberty Nickel That Sell For Less Than "1 Cent On The Dollar&qu


Here is my Judd-1715 struck in Copper in the grade of PCGS-PR66BN. Roughly a handful or so struck by the Mint in 1883.
Any other High R-7 or R-8 patterns or other coins that have mintages around the same as a 1913 Liberty Nickel but sell for less than 1% of the value? Post them here if you own them!
Wondercoin
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"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>There are several California fractional gold coins from period 1 and 2 where there are less or less known and sell for under $7500. At one point, there was a calfrac collector that owned 5 bg-799S and there are only 5 known. So you can start a collection of calfracs and acquire them for typically a lot less than US federal coins but seem to be available without the huge price tag! >>
That sounds like allot of old touring cars that only 5 built with 1 or 2 known to still exist,
BUT when you realize how many cars have 1-5 left, its not that special.
A Pan-Pac…..
Amat Colligendo Focum
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Best wishes,
Eric
The Liberty nickel patterns of 1881-1883 are very interesting and with over 40 different designs they might seem common but over half are R7's or higher according to the latest Judd book. The J-1715 that wondercoin posted is a great example of a very rare coin.
<< <i>What I'm hearing is a distinction between patterns and circulation strikes. Business strikes are always more widely appreciated than proof strikes, patterns, etc. Sort of like Pop music vs. Jazz. >>
Agree. Look at the prices paid for 1916 Standing Liberty Quarters and there were over 50,000 minted.
Patterns and badges may be rare but they are too unique. Sometimes coins get a big price because they
are the rarest in a set like the 1911D Quarter Eagle. The 1905 Double Eagle has a lower mintage but nobody
cares.
<< <i>What I'm hearing is a distinction between patterns and circulation strikes. Business strikes are always more widely appreciated than proof strikes, patterns, etc. Sort of like Pop music vs. Jazz. >>
The 1913 Liberty nickel is not a business strike so I am not following this logic. Love the OP nickel and always love seeing Boiler's coins, by the way.
"Look up, old boy, and see what you get." -William Bonney.
Coins with 5 or less or known in all grades that sell for $30,000 or less? That's a pretty short list, and probably non-existant for regular issue US coins.
Taylor
I am a YN and I do not want anybody to question my IQ Level! I don't know everything and came here to learn!
Anyone else have a coin to show. I'll post another colorful pattern Liberty nickel here momentarily.
Wondercoin
Here is a finest known red Brown 1882 Liberty nickel struck in copper (J-1691). Another neat copper Liberty Nickel, but this one has a dozen or a dozen and a half pieces known. Still at a small fraction of 1% of the value of the 1913, it is a nice Liberty nickel.
Wondercoin
<< <i>The 1913 Lib nickel is the only "V" nickel with a date of 1913 on it. There a lot of V nickels with the date 1883....business strikes, proofs, and patterns.
Coins with 5 or less or known in all grades that sell for $30,000 or less? That's a pretty short list, and probably non-existant for regular issue US coins. >>
There's only one Liberty nickel design for 1881.