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My 100 Greatest US Coins Collection

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  • goldfixer21goldfixer21 Posts: 100 ✭✭✭

    @EliteCollection said:
    I've wanted to coin ever since it first went up for auction in 2002, but I didn't have the means at the time. So I couldn't pass up the opportunity to own it when it became possible in 2021.

    I previously had a modest Saints set with average grade of MS 62 or so and missing many of the key dates. Once I got the 1933, I decided to go all in and build the best Saints set.

    Thanks!

  • tradedollarnuttradedollarnut Posts: 20,180 ✭✭✭✭✭

    When I repurchased the seated dollar set from The Fund, they had added this specific coin to the set. I didn’t think it real so I sold it off individually prior to reselling the set to Hansen

  • Nice even rose gold throughout!

  • willywilly Posts: 356 ✭✭✭✭✭

    Really like the way this collection is coming together. Some beautiful coins represented with great pedigrees.

  • MrEurekaMrEureka Posts: 24,390 ✭✭✭✭✭

    @tradedollarnut said:
    When I repurchased the seated dollar set from The Fund, they had added this specific coin to the set. I didn’t think it real so I sold it off individually prior to reselling the set to Hansen

    Of course it’s real. Whether it belongs in the top 100 list or in a Seated Dollar registry set is another matter, and I’m sure we would agree about those issues.

    Andy Lustig

    Doggedly collecting coins of the Central American Republic.

    Visit the Society of US Pattern Collectors at USPatterns.com.
  • 4Redisin4Redisin Posts: 446 ✭✭✭

    @tradedollarnut said:
    When I repurchased the seated dollar set from The Fund, they had added this specific coin to the set. I didn’t think it real so I sold it off individually prior to reselling the set to Hansen.

    When I saw Proof "Restrike" over another coin, my immediate thought was why the Mint would strike a PR over another coin? Then, what condition was the other coin? Did it have any "mirror". It is definitely of mint quality, so it had to be done at A U.S. MINT. Something interesting going on here.

    @EliteCollection said:
    Here is my 1909-S Lincoln Cent V.D.B. PCGS MS-67 RD (CAC Green). This coin is one of the finest known with a population of 17 with no coins graded higher. It is in a PCGS old green holder.

    Amazing coin BUT: Your coin is a credit to the PCGS SLAB because it has kept it from spotting" all these years!

  • Thats a Beaut!

  • FriendlyEagle7FriendlyEagle7 Posts: 84 ✭✭✭

    That restrike is fascinating. Do we know its pedigree?

    Coin Photographer and Videographer
    https://www.youtube.com/@FriendlyEagle7

  • EastonCollectionEastonCollection Posts: 1,492 ✭✭✭✭✭

    @EliteCollection - this quest and this thread is amazing. You acquired so many Trophy coins that its mindblowing......

    Easton Collection
  • CoinosaurusCoinosaurus Posts: 9,640 ✭✭✭✭✭

    This is great, thanks for sharing. Keep 'em coming!

  • CryptoCrypto Posts: 3,811 ✭✭✭✭✭

    @yosclimber said:

    The 20c 1876-CC is not only extremely rare, but it has one of the most dramatic DDOs on US coins.
    (Maybe only surpassed by the 1c 1955 DDO).
    Unfortunately, it's one of those varieties that is not going to be possible to cherry pick on ebay!

    there are quite a few dramatic doubled dies for 1876cc coins

  • renomedphysrenomedphys Posts: 3,756 ✭✭✭✭✭

    That Pan-Pac $50… I don’t think “Like” is superlative enough. Where’s the “Dayum!” button?

  • yosclimberyosclimber Posts: 4,965 ✭✭✭✭✭
    edited May 28, 2025 1:43AM

    Very cool coin.
    For coins with a very small roster like many in the Top 100 list, I like looking at the roster/provenance for the handful of known coins.
    The roster from the Heritage Bass sale of this coin is an improvement on the Akers list.

    Roster of 1832 12 Stars, BD-2 Half Eagles
    Thanks to Ron Guth (Numismatic Detective Agency) and Saul Teichman for their help in compiling this roster.
    1. MS63 PCGS. George Seavey, exhibited at the February 4, 1869 meeting of the Boston Numismatic Society; Seavey Descriptive Catalog (William Strobridge, 1873), lot 514; Seavey's entire collection was purchased intact by millionaire Boston collector Lorin G. Parmelee before the Strobridge auction took place; Parmelee Collection (New York Coin & Stamp, 6/1890), lot 1013; Byron Reed; City of Omaha; Durham Western Heritage Museum; Byron Reed Collection (Christie's and Spink America, 10/1996), lot 120, realized $297,000; D. Brent Pogue Collection, Part IV (Stack's Bowers and Sotheby's, 5/2016), lot 4043, realized $822,500; D.L. Hansen Collection.
    2. AU53 PCGS. William Cutler Atwater Collection (B. Max Mehl, 6/1946), lot 1650; Louis E. Eliasberg, Sr.; Eliasberg Estate; United States Gold Coin Collection (Bowers and Ruddy, 10/1982), lot 393, realized $44,000; Harry W. Bass, Jr.; Harry Bass Core Collection, on display at ANA Headquarters in Colorado Springs until 2022 (HBCC #3160). The present coin.
    3. XF45 NGC. Royal Coins of Houston, reportedly purchased over the counter in the 1970s; Chuck Varner; Mike Brownlee; Dr. Robert C. Wynsen Collection (David Akers, 5/1998), lot 375, realized $159,500.
    4. VF, holed and plugged, uncertified. Matthew Stickney Collection (Henry Chapman, 6/1907), lot 674, holed above the head, realized $50, to "Iron", a.k.a. John Story Jenks; John Story Jenks Collection (Henry Chapman, 12/1921), lot 5772, still holed; possibly "Colonel" E.H.R. Green, as the F.C.C. Boyd appraisal of his collection indicates he owned a holed 1832 half eagle, in addition to his primary coin; Stack's in 1943; Clifford T. Weihman; Josiah K. Lilly in 1954, via Stack's, now with hole plugged; Lilly Estate, donated intact to the National Numismatic Collection in exchange for a $5.5 million tax credit, National Numismatic Collection at the Smithsonian Institution, ID #68.159.0203 and pictured on the Smithsonian website.
    5. Uncirculated. William H. Woodin, exhibited at the 1914 ANS Exhibition; Waldo Newcomer, imaged on the Newcomer plates; "Colonel" E.H.R. Green, imaged on Stack's "Colonel" Green plates; King Farouk; Palace Collections of Egypt (Sotheby's, 2/1954), part of lot 247.

    Additional Appearances
    A. Very Fine. H.O. Granberg Collection (B. Max Mehl, 7/1913), lot 1023, realized $515; Waldo Newcomer, listed in the Newcomer Inventory as #124, with a grade of "Ex. fine" and a value of $515. Possibly the coin in number 2 or 3 above.
    B. Extremely Fine, traces of mint luster. H.E. Rawson Collection (B. Max Mehl, 12/1922), lot 114, realized $1,310. Possibly the coin in number 2 or 3 above.
    Note: Walter Breen reported a sixth example in the National Numismatic Collection, because the Mint Cabinet Acquisition Book indicates an 1832 half eagle was purchased on 2/24/1883, for $20. However, that coin was a 13 Stars, BD-1 example.

    from
    https://coins.ha.com/itm/early-half-eagles/half-eagles/1832-5-12-stars-bd-2-high-r7-au53-pcgs-pcgs-519951-/a/1353-11054.s

    The rosters on PCGS CoinFacts (by Ron Guth) are also generally excellent and only slightly out of date:

    https://www.pcgs.com/coinfacts/coin/1832-5-12-stars/8155

  • CoinbertCoinbert Posts: 391 ✭✭✭✭✭

    Another incredible coin! I am a huge early Proof fan. The debate will continue whether all of the 1841 quarter eagles were struck as Proofs. 1841 is an interesting year for Proof half cents and large cents with many more coins produced than any other year in the 1840's. Just begs one to ask the question, why?

  • EastonCollectionEastonCollection Posts: 1,492 ✭✭✭✭✭

    @EliteCollection - The 1796 Half cent (w/Pole) is absolutely incredible! Clearly finer than the Missouri and Pogue cabinet examples and those guys were out for the best of the best! I always felt that the 1796 w/pole should be ranked higher than #59 based on rarity, fame and just coolness.

    Easton Collection
  • RichieURichRichieURich Posts: 8,530 ✭✭✭✭✭

    This collection is absolutely fantastic! I like the way you have focused on the Top 100 rather than trying to accumulate everything, which would lead to owning a lot of common coins. Each coin blows me away, and the next coin even moreso. And thank you very much for sharing your collection with other collectors!!!

    An authorized PCGS dealer, and a contributor to the Red Book.

  • DCWDCW Posts: 7,557 ✭✭✭✭✭

    A dream collection of dream coins! I'm in awe. Thanks for sharing it with us all

    Dead Cat Waltz Exonumia
    "Coin collecting for outcasts..."

  • CoinbertCoinbert Posts: 391 ✭✭✭✭✭

    Another great coin EliteCollection. Brings back memories as a kid (early 1960's) in my grandfather's grocery store looking through all of the coins in the cash register drawer. A customer told me he had one and I offered him $100 for it. Never happened. We all had a copper plated steel 1943 cent to show off for fun.

  • skier07skier07 Posts: 4,250 ✭✭✭✭✭

    Your collection is amazing and thanks for posting and taking the time to answer questions.

  • earlyAurumearlyAurum Posts: 748 ✭✭✭✭✭

    Just an amazing collection and unbelievable goal. Are there any that you will not be able to acquire?

  • johnny010johnny010 Posts: 1,826 ✭✭✭✭✭

    Drum roll for the 1804 $1 😎

  • Early_Milled_Latin_America Early_Milled_Latin_America Posts: 6,319 ✭✭✭✭✭

    @johnny010 said:
    Drum roll for the 1804 $1 😎

    1913 Liberty head nickel and 1894-S dime

  • yosclimberyosclimber Posts: 4,965 ✭✭✭✭✭
    edited May 31, 2025 5:23PM

    @earlyAurum said:
    Just an amazing collection and unbelievable goal. Are there any that you will not be able to acquire?

    He answered this back on May 9:

    I made a dent but it's nowhere 100% complete as that's impossible. Many of the top 100 greatest US coins exists only in museums. And many of them never show up for decades.

    Example: 1849 $20 (# 5).

  • EliteCollectionEliteCollection Posts: 257 ✭✭✭✭✭

    @Early_Milled_Latin_America said:

    @johnny010 said:
    Drum roll for the 1804 $1 😎

    1913 Liberty head nickel and 1894-S dime

    Ooh, the big 3!

  • Early_Milled_Latin_America Early_Milled_Latin_America Posts: 6,319 ✭✭✭✭✭
    edited May 31, 2025 5:54PM

    @EliteCollection said:

    @Early_Milled_Latin_America said:

    @johnny010 said:
    Drum roll for the 1804 $1 😎

    1913 Liberty head nickel and 1894-S dime

    Ooh, the big 3!

    My favourite of them all (I mean all US coins) is the 1894-S dime & then the 1794 dollar.

  • MJPHELANMJPHELAN Posts: 790 ✭✭✭

    The 61 RB copper Lincoln sure looks nice for a 61 (at least from the photos). Thanks for sharing the collection.

    Mark
  • Early_Milled_Latin_America Early_Milled_Latin_America Posts: 6,319 ✭✭✭✭✭

    Is the strawberry cent in the top 100 I would imagine so?

  • yosclimberyosclimber Posts: 4,965 ✭✭✭✭✭

    @Early_Milled_Latin_America said:
    Is the strawberry cent in the top 100 I would imagine so?

    Yes, #73.

  • EastonCollectionEastonCollection Posts: 1,492 ✭✭✭✭✭
    edited May 31, 2025 8:00PM

    Now this is getting very exciting - less than 50 spots left with 15 spots in the top 20 left..........
    Also, 18 left that are pre 1840! Can't wait to see what's next.......

    Easton Collection
  • WiscKauWiscKau Posts: 216 ✭✭✭✭

    @EliteCollection said:
    Here is my 1792 Flowing Hair Half Dime/Half Disme PCGS MS-66 (CAC Green). This coin has a population of 3 with only 2 coins graded higher. The coin is pedigreed to Dr. J. Hewitt Judd and Jimmy Hayes.

    This coin is #14 in my set "Elite's 100 Greatest U.S. Coins".

    Stacks Bowers Auctions:

    Regarding the 1792 half disme, a single set of dies was used to complete the entire mintage of approximately 1,500 pieces for the 1792 half disme. The obverse features a bust of Liberty with short, curly hair, the date 1792 in small digits immediately below the curved truncation of the bust. The legend LIB. PAR. OF SCIENCE & INDUSTRY is around the border, an abbreviation of "Liberty, parent of science and industry." On the reverse, a small eagle with spread wings faces to the left with the denomination HALF DISME and a single star below. The legend UNI. STATES OF AMERICA encircles most of the reverse periphery. All 1792 half dimes except for the unique copper impression (Judd-8) are struck in silver with a diagonally reeded edge. The coins were struck with medallic alignment.

    In addition to its historical significance as the first regular issue coin struck under authority of the United States Mint, the 1792 half disme enjoys such strong demand among advanced collectors due to a couple of popular stories attached to this issue. The first has it that George Washington himself provided some of his own silverware to be melted down and coined into these half dismes -- this from the Memorandum was picked up by the newspaper Philadelphia Dispatch in 1853. Another story suggests that the portrait of Liberty used on the obverse of these coins is a likeness of Washington's wife Martha. Neither has yet been proven, but have become a part of the mythology of our numismatic history.

    1792 H10C PCGS MS 66 CAC (Pop 3/2)

    FANTASTIC!!!!!!!

  • Plus00VltraPlus00Vltra Posts: 63 ✭✭✭

    "Liberty, Parent of Science and Industry" is a superlative national motto.

  • johnny010johnny010 Posts: 1,826 ✭✭✭✭✭

    Great addition to the thread @EastonCollection

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