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Problems with Regulated Gold in Early America?

MrEurekaMrEureka Posts: 24,507 ✭✭✭✭✭

For those unfamiliar with regulated gold, here’s a nice intro:

http://www.usrarecoininvestments.com/coin_info/colonial_american_coins_regulated_gold.htm

My questions: After the pieces were regulated, what would stop unscrupulous people from clipping the coins and then passing them off at full value? Are there any such clipped pieces still out there in collectors’ hands? Are there any contemporary accounts of this actually happening?

Andy Lustig

Doggedly collecting coins of the Central American Republic.

Visit the Society of US Pattern Collectors at USPatterns.com.

Comments

  • LakesammmanLakesammman Posts: 17,543 ✭✭✭✭✭

    Have wondered about that too.

    I don't think they were "sold" with a money back guarantee - once they left the shop, they needed to be re-regulated.

    "My friends who see my collection sometimes ask what something costs. I tell them and they are in awe at my stupidity." (Baccaruda, 12/03).I find it hard to believe that he (Trump) rushed to some hotel to meet girls of loose morals, although ours are undoubtedly the best in the world. (Putin 1/17) Gone but not forgotten. IGWT, Speedy, Bear, BigE, HokieFore, John Burns, Russ, TahoeDale, Dahlonega, Astrorat, Stewart Blay, Oldhoopster, Broadstruck, Ricko, Big Moose, Cardinal.
  • CryptoCrypto Posts: 3,938 ✭✭✭✭✭

    Don’t worry, people are still regulating them to this day. It is never too late

    Jokes aside I suspect the people who get swindled and the people who know value has remained constant over the centuries and that regulation was more about their business model than protecting the un-protectable

  • CaptHenwayCaptHenway Posts: 33,081 ✭✭✭✭✭

    You are of course correct that a gold coin could have been clipped after it was regulated, but the same principle of fraudulent removal of gold was true (via other means such as sweating, filing down the high points, etc.) about any gold coin in circulation. Anybody receiving a gold coin had to execute due diligence by looking at it for signs of tampering and perhaps weighing it.

    Numismatist. 54 year member ANA. Former ANA Senior Authenticator. Winner of four ANA Heath Literary Awards; three Wayte and Olga Raymond Literary Awards; Numismatist of the Year Award 2009, and Lifetime Achievement Award 2020. Author "The Enigmatic Lincoln Cents of 1922," due out late 2025.
  • RogerBRogerB Posts: 8,852 ✭✭✭✭✭
    edited July 20, 2019 8:50AM

    Gold coins were received predominantly by specie dealers, brokers and bankers - all of whom knew how to assess and value coins. Further, circulation was largely from point to point between regions and internationally, thus restricting the types/educations of people interacting with the money.

    The risk encountering adulterated 'regulated' gold was small due to this very limited and expert exposure. Only when gold coins entered broader commercial use, did clipping, sweating and other problems become more prevalent.

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