1917 Matte Proof Lincoln
I was at my coin meeting tonight and one new dealer showed up with several books of coins in 2x2s. I took a look at his Lincoln cents. Most were circulated. All of the holders looked and felt very old. One was a 1917 labled as a matte proof. He had $300 on it. I thought it was strange. I thought the matte proofs ended in 1916. It had high thin rims and extra details in Lincoln. I have not seen enough of these to tell if it were really a proof or not. Then another club member started asking me questions. I got distracted and didn't make it back to look at the coin before the end of the meeting. When I got home, I looked it up in Breen's book. It seems some 1917 proofs may have been made but no mintage was given.
Does anyone have any info on the 1917 proof Lincoln? Also how can you tell the proof from a well struck business strike? I've seen some of the early years that have a matte like luster but were not proofs.
Does anyone have any info on the 1917 proof Lincoln? Also how can you tell the proof from a well struck business strike? I've seen some of the early years that have a matte like luster but were not proofs.
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FrederickCoinClub
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Those few early matte proof Lincolns I,ve seen always left me confused.
Maybe they really were early Lincoln matte proofs but I couldnt see the big diff.
Guess I,ve only seen the culls?
Would they have a similar finish and appearance as say a `98 SMS JFK ?
You know ,that finish.
We ARE watching you.
but who knows??
for me it would have to be a matte proof if a genuine proof for me!! was it a no brainer matte finish?? if so
what color is it? are the edges totally squared off and 25% bigger than an ordinary well struck business strike lincoln??
if the edges are totally squared off and larger than a regular beleved edge for lack of a better description and a true matte surface i would buy it for 300!
maybe worth to take a flyer for 200 to 300?
KEEP ME INFORMED
again probsbly just an exquisite business strike sh1t now you got me hot!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
sincerely michael
I didn't think much more about the coin until now. I thought the coin was fake because of the date. I've been to every meeting in the past year and I have never seen this small time dealer before. He didn't identify himself as a visitor (we identify the visitors and give them a free coin from the club). Now I hope he comes back so I can take a look at it. Odds are it is a business strike, but sometimes nice things can be found. I read the 1870-S half dime was found in a junk box! There is always hope.
FrederickCoinClub
In The Complete Guide To Lincoln Cents, David Lange pretty much sums up the general position of Lincoln experts today when he writes: “Though a few examples dated 1917 have traded hands as proof or specimen strikings, these coins remain in a shadowy netherworld...The grading services have declined to certify any 1917 cents as proofs, just as they have for all alleged 1917 proofs of various denominations...”
But, if you can get a copy, see The Standard Guide To The Lincoln Cent, by Sol Taylor, who claims that mint records show that 939 pieces were struck and describes the sale of a couple of coins purported to be 1917 proofs in the 1980s and early 1990s.
For $300 it would be an interesting conversation piece, but as far as a grading service ever certifying and slabbing it, it is highly unlikely!
My Complete PROOF Lincoln Cent with Major Varieties(1909-2015)Set Registry
On the other hand, I've seen a 100% convincing proof 1917 nickel, so I would not be surprised if a true proof 1917 cent exists. If well preserved, it would be a six-figure item.
Doggedly collecting coins of the Central American Republic.
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Thats odd.
Can't remember. Too many years back. Anyone remember this?
FrederickCoinClub
Another cool coin would be a 10 VDB.
edited to add; you may not even need a loupe to determine that.
but if you do look at it and it is techniacally superb and has all the charactistics of a proof and looks exceptionally eye appealing
lets play devils advocate here even if not a proof if it is again technically superb and monster eye appealling with many matte proof charactistics who is to say waht it is??
but a great conversation piece
and after all is said and done it has to be at least worth 300 dollars!! and an added bonus as a study piece to havre fun with and show it to david lange if you ever get it to a show or other lincoln fanatics
sweet
saweeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeet
sincerely michael
<< <i> If this dealer shows up again, I'm going to buy it, unless I can see it is only a business strike. >>
With this much curiosity envolved, I would make an effort to find out who else at your meeting talked to this dealer and I would make an effort to get touch with him.
He who snoozes, often looses. dave
I'll take a much better look at it next time. If I really don't think it is proof I won't buy it. I'm not a big gambler so $300 is a lot to throw away at a coin. The best would be for me to take a picture and post it here but i don't think he would let me do that
FrederickCoinClub
Earlier this afternoon as I was plowing through my daily dose of the Syracuse Wheat Cent Hoard, I came across a marvelous brown 1917 with astounding detail of strike and with fields (both obverse and reverse) that are 100% matte-like (based on descriptions of matte surfaces that I've read). I admired the coin for several minutes, popped it into a 2x2, and grabbed my Redbook to confirm my belief that the matte proofs ended in 1916. My Redbook (which happens to be a 1973 edition--revealing what kind of collector I am) lists no parenthetical proof mintage numbers beyond 1916. I'm sure that's no surprise to all you experts.
I recalled having seen a discussion about 1917 matte proof Lincolns on this board, so I just searched for it and re-read the entire thread. This is a VERY intriguing thread, given what I found today.
Fortunately, the Syracuse Hoard was loaded with uncirculated late-teens of many colors, so I have no shortage of other breathtakingly well-struck 1917s on hand to compare my matte-like 1917 to. As far as I know, I'd never seen a matte-proof prior to today, but I can report the following:
1) The fields of my "matte" specimen are unlike any fields I've ever seen on a Lincoln cent. They're clearly intended to be slightly grainy/fuzzy and unreflective, and their appearance is in stark contrast to the reflective fields of the red 1917s that I've also pulled out of the Hoard.
2) The rims of my "matte" specimen are considerably wider than those of my other choice uncirculated 1917s, and they exhibit the lovely squared border to the fields that others on this thread have mentioned.
3) The detail in the hair and beard is even more striking in my "matte" specimen than in my other really nice 1917s.
I'm about as far from an expert on matte proofs as anyone can be, but I think I have the real thing here. If it doesn't walk like a duck, or look like a duck, or sound like a duck, it's probably not a duck. This coin is NOT just another well-struck 1917 Lincoln. Whether or not it's a swan will be interesting to find out.
I still haven't solved the mystery of how to get a properly focused tight shot of a coin with my Kodak EasyShare Z760 camera, so I have no means of providing photos. (I also haven't a clue as to how to create a photo file that's small enough to attach to these messages.)
But there's a Lincoln matte-proof collector who lives about thirty miles north of me, and I'll try to get him to take a look at it within the next few weeks.
If I had to bet anything valuable on whether they struck any 1917 matte-proofs, I'd have to bet that they did. This just isn't like all the other 1917s (and I just happen to be swimming in nice 1917s).
Whatever this is, it's a pretty special coin! Into the safe-deposit box at the bank first thing tomorrow morning!
I have gone on to collect some certified matte proof Lincolns but I have never seen another 1917 like that one again. The guy who had it for sale never came back to the coin club. Now that I have some matte and satin/matte proof Lincolns, I am sure I could identify them.
The business strike 1917 Lincolns can be sharp and well struck. Then if the die wears some, the fields will have an orange peel surface that looks a bit like a matte surface. A coin like this will get your hopes up in finding a matte proof.
I did see a 1917 possible proof Walker at the Baltimore show about a year ago. It was in an ANACS holder with a MS65 Specimen label. I checked it and it did have many characteristics of a proof strike.
FrederickCoinClub
In honor of the memory of Cpl. Michael E. Thompson
Your story is interesting, but just like the 1959 Lincoln wheat ear reverse cent, it really doesn't matter what the story is. If you have a legitimate 1917 Matte Proof Lincoln cent it is worth thousands if not over a hundred thousand dollars to collectors. The ONLY way you can convince the hobby that you have the real thing is to have the coin graded by PCGS, NGC or ANACS. IF one of those services grades your coin as a Matte Proof, then and only then can you know you have a coin which the hobby will accept as being "the real thing". I mentioned the 1959 wheat ear reverse above because no major third party grading service would authenticate it as real. Don't waste your time having pictures taken of it. If you are interested in the money the coin might be worth, you must act on it to get it certified. Otherwise, just have fun with your coins. Steve
My Complete PROOF Lincoln Cent with Major Varieties(1909-2015)Set Registry
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Steve
My Complete PROOF Lincoln Cent with Major Varieties(1909-2015)Set Registry
<< <i>yea it is still NOT a matte proof >>
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<< <i>Wouldn't it to be great to have the real thing.
Another cool coin would be a 10 VDB. >>
I have a 1910 matte proof Lincoln cent that appears to have a partial VDB on the reverse. It was sold in a major auction as a 1910 with VDB reverse.
An authorized PCGS dealer, and a contributor to the Red Book.
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Sure, Steve!
I'm now referring to it as my "matte-like" 1917. I took it to a couple of local dealers, and both were pretty quick to conclude that it isn't a matte proof. Yes, it has matte-like fields; yes, the rims are wider and sharper than most circulation strikes; and yes, the detail in nice. However, (according to one dealer whose opinion I have a great deal of respect for), the corners of the rims aren't quite sharp enough and the detail on the beard and hair isn't quite sharp enough to lead him to judge it to be a proof strike. By the way, this dealer does believe that the mint struck some 1917 matte proof Lincolns, so he's not just looking for features of the coin to support his belief that none were ever struck.
I'll have the opportunity sometime soon to show it to cohodk, whom I take to be THE local expert on matte proof Lincolns. Also, it's the first coin that I'll have photographed by whomever I find to take some good shots of some of my favorite finds in the Hoard. Eventually I'll get its image onto this forum.
I love the coin one way or the other. If were a genuine 1917 proof, I'd have had to sell it. Now I can keep it and enjoy it.
Steve
My Complete PROOF Lincoln Cent with Major Varieties(1909-2015)Set Registry
Any info on the "1910-VDB" ?
and yes homerunhall there are 1917 matte proof bufalo nickels ....
you may not like the fact that they exist but they do ....
(1) 1917 matte proof 63 (cleaned) slabbed by segs (1998) and ....
(2) 1917 matte proof 58 slabbed by segs (2002) ....
also 1917 matte proof walking liberty half dollars exist ....
and 1917 matte proof standing liberty quarters exist ....
((no 1917 matte proof mercury dimes are known to exist .... ))
and 1 or perhaps 2 1917 matte proof lincoln cents exist ....
you may not like this but, it is a fact.
they do exist !!!
you can cleanse this post again but this does not change the facts
a 1917 matte proof walking liberty half dollar sold on ebay yesterday!
blessings to all
buffnixx
a.k.a "The BUFFINATOR"
Sorry, but the jury is still out on this one ... and they have asked to place supper orders so it may be a while.
"Though not an official proof issue, the 1917 was probably a special striking for presentation. Should have the basic diagnostics of matte proof cents."
He was definitely a student of the series. Show me some other credible presenters who claim PROOF of a 1917 MPL.
In honor of the memory of Cpl. Michael E. Thompson
My Complete PROOF Lincoln Cent with Major Varieties(1909-2015)Set Registry
I held in my hand 2 ...not one but 2 doubled die #4 1972 lincoln cents ...graded by segs....and attributed by segs.
they were without a doubt die #8's.
so much for their accuracy!
p.s. there are NO 1917 matte proofs!