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Barber dime set- more photos added

rheddenrhedden Posts: 6,632 ✭✭✭✭✭
Last summer, I posted a description of a great Barber dime set I was buying from a personal friend. Let's just say that it was better material than what I was expecting, and it took a while to pay it off. Anyway, here it is, and I just had time to take a few photos this morning before locking them up & heading to work. If those old green PCGS boxes don't get your heart pumping, you don't belong on the PCGS boards!

This collection was assembled prior to 1960, and kept intact since then. A list of the contents is included below, and all of the PCGS coins are OGH submitted only once, in 1990. I will be re-submitting a bunch for possible upgrades and reimbursing the owner if successful, as it is not my nature to lie, cheat, 'n' steal. Looking through the coins last night, my overall impression was that the Business Strikes are not graded any differently than coins in the new blue holders, just like HomeRunHall keeps telling us. I spot 4 or 5 coins in the group that I think they ought to bump up a point, or maybe they won't; and 4 or 5 that I think are overgraded by a point. However, in looking at the proofs, I'd have to say that many of them will go up 1-2 points and get a CAM designation on top of that. For example, the 1895 proof shown below is in a PR64 holder, and I can't see it as any less than a 65. If people want to see specific coins, I will post images next week. I hope you enjoy viewing this seldom-encountered OGH hoard.


One more thing: none of these coins are currently for sale, nor do I wish to have help purchasing any further collections, so polite thanks in advance for not making any offers. I'm primarily posting this thread for the enjoyment of fellow Barber collectors, and also due to the current interest in the OGH issue.


1892 Raw AU-50
1892-S PCGS MS-62
1892-O PCGS MS-65
1893-P PCGS PR-64
1893-O PCGS MS-62
1893-S PCGS MS-63
1894-P PCGS PR-64
1894-O AU Clnd.
1895-P PCGS PR-64
1895-O PCGS MS-63
1895-S AU, Clnd.
1896-P PCGS MS-63
1896-O AU, Clnd.
1896-S PCGS MS-64
1897-P Raw MS-62
1897-O AU Clnd.
1897-S PCGS MS-63
1898-P PCGS PR-64
1898-O PCGS MS-62
1898-S PCGS MS-64
1899-P PCGS PR-63
1899-O AU Clnd.
1899-S Cleaned XF
1900 PCGS PR-63
1900-O PCGS MS-64
1900-S PCGS MS-62
1901-P PCGS PR-62
1901-O XF-AU Clnd.
1901-S PCGS MS-64
1902 PCGS PR-63
1902-O AU-Unc. detail, graffitti reverse, D'Oh!
1902-S Cleaned AU
1903 PCGS PR-62
1903-O PCGS AU-58
1903-S PCGS MS-63
1904-P AU
1904-S PCGS MS-62
1905-P PCGS PR-63
1905-O MS-60
1905-S PCGS AU-58
1906-P PCGS MS-62
1906-O PCGS MS-63
1906-D PCGS MS-63
1906-S PCGS MS-62
1907 Raw AU58/MS-62
1907-O PCGS MS-62
1907-D PCGS MS-63
1907-S PCGS MS-62
1908-P PCGS PR-62
1908-O PCGS MS-62
1908-D PCGS MS-62
1908-S PCGS MS-62
1909 raw AU-58/MS-62
1909-O Cleaned AU-58
1909-D PCGS MS-63
1909-S PCGS MS-61
1910-P PCGS PR-62
1910-D PCGS MS-62
1910-S PCGS MS-62
1911-P PCGS PR-63
1911-D AU, harshly cleaned (couldn't find a better 11-D than this???)
1911-S PCGS AU-55
1912 PCGS MS-62
1912-D PCGS MS-62
1912-S PCGS MS-63
1913 PCGS PR-63
1913-S PCGS MS-62
1914 Raw MS-60+
1914-D Raw AU-55
1914-S PCGS MS-65
1915 Raw MS-60+
1915-S PCGS MS-63
1916-P Raw AU
1916-S Raw AU-55, nice purple toning

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Comments

  • Awesome post. I'd like to see pictures of all posted if you get a chance.
  • BarndogBarndog Posts: 20,515 ✭✭✭✭✭
    Congratulations. Oh, and are any for sale?


    image
  • TomBTomB Posts: 22,080 ✭✭✭✭✭
    That was truly a once in a lifetime opportunity and I am glad that they are going to a collector who can appreciate what they are.image
    Thomas Bush Numismatics & Numismatic Photography

    In honor of the memory of Cpl. Michael E. Thompson

    image
  • rheddenrhedden Posts: 6,632 ✭✭✭✭✭
    That was truly a once in a lifetime opportunity

    ...until I go back and get the quarters & half dollars. image






    Here's the 1907-D dime, one of the rarest dates in Unc.


    image
  • lkrarecoinslkrarecoins Posts: 2,137 ✭✭✭
    god bless....you have some beautiful stuff there
    In Loving Memory of my Dad......My best friend, My inspiration, and My Coin Collecting Partner

    "La Vostra Nonna Ha Faccia Del Fungo"
  • Dave99BDave99B Posts: 8,698 ✭✭✭✭✭
    Cool set; interesting history too. Post more pics, please!

    Not for sale? Come on, at the "right" price, EVERYTHING is for sale!

    Thx for sharing,

    Dave
    Always looking for original, better date VF20-VF35 Barber quarters and halves, and a quality beer.
  • No Buffalo nickels? image
  • rheddenrhedden Posts: 6,632 ✭✭✭✭✭
    Going to be busy photographing these for a while...

    image
  • BarndogBarndog Posts: 20,515 ✭✭✭✭✭
    so does this new love (Barber Dimes) mean that you will have to make room and dump your half dimes?

    Please!
  • CladiatorCladiator Posts: 18,253 ✭✭✭✭✭
    The slab is totally obstructing your wood venier background! image
  • RickMilauskasRickMilauskas Posts: 1,985 ✭✭✭
    WOW...totally awesome!

    You have some really incredibly coins there.image
  • rheddenrhedden Posts: 6,632 ✭✭✭✭✭
    Come on, at the "right" price, EVERYTHING is for sale!

    You should have offered me $50,000 for one of the common dates just to see me squirm.


    The slab is totally obstructing your wood venier background!


    Yes, this is a serious issue I need to resolve when I get home. The coins just don't look the same without the distinctive plywood background. BTW, an ugly but distinctive background is a great way to stop ebay crooks from stealing your photos.


    so does this new love (Barber Dimes) mean that you will have to make room and dump your half dimes?

    Never! They're half the size of the Barbers and cost twice as much- what could be better than that?

  • I didn't see the grade on your 94-S
  • rheddenrhedden Posts: 6,632 ✭✭✭✭✭
    I didn't see the grade on your 94-S


    Why bother? There was a whole dang BU roll in there, so I figured they were common little junkers and paid the guy face value. image

    I suddenly feel like buying an ice cream cone for some reason.*















    *a somewhat obscure reference to the story of a guy getting an 1894-S dime in change for an ice cream cone.
  • STONESTONE Posts: 15,275
    Looks like great stuff you have there. Too bad for all the better date cleaned coins though. I'm drooling at the fact that this collector also had Proofs instead of business strikes for his Phily coins. All-in-all a very impressive collection.

    I'm still missing the 1893, 1895-O, 1896-S, 1897-O, 1901-S, 1903-S, 1904-S, 1905-O (I have the Micro though), and a 1910-D.
    My collection grades out to about a 5.81 GPA and about 87% complete. Nothing overly huge in it, but I was able to get this far in about 2 years on a lot of allowance $.
    I have several VF's in it, but many are AG/G coins.
  • rheddenrhedden Posts: 6,632 ✭✭✭✭✭
    I'm still missing the 1893, 1895-O, 1896-S, 1897-O, 1901-S, 1903-S, 1904-S, 1905-O (I have the Micro though), and a 1910-D.

    I'd recommend saving your money and getting a nice certified 1895-O, then worrying about the others later. The 1895-O is more likely to increase in price in the short term, making you sorry later. Anyone else second my advice? Good luck completing the set- a long and worthwhile journey.


  • << <i>Anyone else second my advice >>



    I'd recommend waiting until the next recession (1-3 years). They will all be about half what they are now.
  • PonyExpress8PonyExpress8 Posts: 1,670 ✭✭✭
    Such a beautiful set of coins. Congratulations on finding them and giving them a new appreciative home.
    The End of the Line in the West.

    Website-Americana Rare Coin Inc


  • << <i>I was able to get this far in about 2 years on a lot of allowance $. >>



    Wish I had an allowance that generous!

    What do you think, Mr. Bigglesworth?
    image
  • coinlieutenantcoinlieutenant Posts: 9,320 ✭✭✭✭✭
    Very very cool...
  • Congratulations on acquiring a beautiful set of Barber dimes..........looking forward to additional images.
  • WhiteTornadoWhiteTornado Posts: 2,102 ✭✭✭
    Thanks for sharing, what a find and what an opportunity for you! I am working on a set of Barber Dimes myself, but they will all be in much lower grades and I've had to put that collection on the back burner for a while.
  • CaseyCasey Posts: 1,502 ✭✭
    What an awesome collection! Please keep those images coming!
  • HTubbsHTubbs Posts: 4,138 ✭✭✭
    Sweet stuff Ron!image
  • MFHMFH Posts: 11,720 ✭✭✭✭

    image

    I remember your mentioning this purchase awhile ago...NICE set of coins there.

    I assume that you'll be adding to it to upgrade the cleaned coins...when you have a chance, add this set to the Barber Dime Registry along with the images.

    You've whetted our appitites for more !!!
    Mike Hayes
    ~~~~~~~~~~~~
    Coin collecting is not a hobby, it's an obsession !

    New Barber Purchases
  • rheddenrhedden Posts: 6,632 ✭✭✭✭✭
    I assume that you'll be adding to it to upgrade the cleaned coins

    This brings up an interesting point. I went from zero to complete set in one day, and this collection is not really "mine," so to speak, as I did not assemble it myself. There are a number of coins that I would not have purchased for my own set, which will be replaced in time with PCGS coins that have the look I want. The fun begins now as I attempt to replace the 4 or 5 cleaned or scratched pieces, and perhaps add some more PCGS coins to complete the set in "PCGS" condition.

    I'm working on photographing the rest of the set this weekend, and I'll start putting up more pics on Monday.
  • coinandcurrency242coinandcurrency242 Posts: 1,971 ✭✭✭✭
    A stunning collection you bought!

    Positive BST as a seller: Namvet69, Lordmarcovan, Bigjpst, Soldi, mustanggt, CoinHoader, moursund, SufinxHi, al410, JWP

  • rheddenrhedden Posts: 6,632 ✭✭✭✭✭

    Here are a few of the "raw" coins from the set.

    This one is an 1892-P with some heavy clask marks on the obverse and reverse. I grade it AU-53, and it is nice and original. I think it would slab at PCGS without a doubt, but it isn't worth enough to send it in.

    image


    Here's the 1894-O, one of the keys to the series. This is a nice example with AU detail, but it has been lightly polished, giving the obverse an unnatural gloss. I wouldn't submit this to PCGS, but it's still an appealing coin given its status as a key date.

    image


    Finally, here is an 1895-S that obviously had reflective, prooflike surfaces when it was struck. This coin must have been a stunning gem before entering circulation. It is now a nice AU for detail. Unfortunately, it has a fairly good swath of hairline scratches extending from Liberty's face into the field at 2:00. This "wipe" is completely invisible in the photo, suggesting that I should get a job taking coin photos for ebay powersellers. Another fairly nice key date that I would not submit to PCGS for fear of bodybag.



    image



    More photos to come later.
  • NumisOxideNumisOxide Posts: 11,002 ✭✭✭✭✭
    That is an amazing set of dimes you got there.
  • USCGCraigUSCGCraig Posts: 1,008 ✭✭
    Wow Ron. Beautiful set. I'm sure you will lovingly add to this great set.
    Coast Guard Craig

    Looking for Denmark 1874 20-Kroner. Please offer.
  • rheddenrhedden Posts: 6,632 ✭✭✭✭✭
    Here's the 1896-O from the set. AU detail, but a dipped coin with a long, thin scuff in front of the face (which isn't as bad as the pic shows). This is a coin that might make it into a slab, or maybe it won't. I'll never know because I'm not parting with $40 to find out.

    image


    Here is the 1897-O, a good match to the 1896-O. This coin is also dipped, and it might slab, or it might bag for cleaning. Here's a good question for Barber dime enthusiasts: do you think the 1896-O or the 1897-O is harder to locate in nice condition? I'd go with the 1896-O, since I think it's a bit tougher in Unc.


    image


    Finally, here is the 1897-P. This is an MS-62 coin that looks like an MS-65 in the pics. In other words, I should list it on ebay as 1897 BARBER GEMMY MS66 L@@K! and see where it ends up after some good shill bidder action (kidding!). The reason this is an MS-62 is that it has a few tiny hairlines (slide marks) on the cheek from sliding around in a flip or with other coins in a box/bag. It has full, unbroken luster across the entire coin, including Liberty's cheek, differentiating this from an AU-58 in my book.

    image
  • ricmanricman Posts: 313 ✭✭✭
    What wonderful coins!! The 95 O is the nicest I've ever seen.image
  • roadrunnerroadrunner Posts: 28,313 ✭✭✭✭✭
    I think the 95-0 would upgrade to MS64. Very nice. Get yours now
    because these will not get cheaper in Fine-AU. You can't find them now in these grades...and if you should stumble upon one it should cost you 30% over sheet. If you can buy it for bid/ask jump on it.
    This key to the barber dime set is not going down in the next crash....but I cannot say that about that 1916 25c or 1909-s VDB.
    Those 2 scare me.

    I would also agree that the 1895 looks PF65ish.

    The 1897-0 eluded me in problem free VF-AU for quite some time. I suspect it is tougher than the 96-0 but both are difficult.
    These 2 dates were somewhat saved in UNC but not in circ.

    roadrunner
    Barbarous Relic No More, LSCC -GoldSeek--shadow stats--SafeHaven--321gold
  • rheddenrhedden Posts: 6,632 ✭✭✭✭✭
    I think the 95-0 would upgrade to MS64.

    We will soon find out, because it's going back for a re-grade shortly. I personally think it stays at MS-63 due to some contact marks here and there; my camera takes optimistic photos. Roadrunner makes a good point about the scarcity of the 1895-o compared to key dates in other popular series. Look at the PCGS population Report if you don't believe in the scarcity of this issue. It is rare above MS-60, and people who own coins like this will not part with them for lowball money.


    Here's the next installment of raw coin photos. The 1899-o is a date I wish was a BU coin, as it is is incredibly scarce in MS-60 or higher. The example included with this set was dipped, but it is again one of those coins that might slab anyway. Not a bad example considering the scarcity of the date.

    image

    The 1899-S is one of a few coins that I will almost certainly replace. This coin was polished and does have some light hairlining in the fields. As I understand, much of the mintage of this issue were sent to the Philippine Islands after the Spanish-American War. I see a fair number of these coins available in both circulated and Unc. grades, so it may not be that hard to replace it.

    image

    The 1901-o is another very scarce O-mint that I wish I had in Unc. However, this lightly circulated example is the best that the previous collector could find. This set was put together between the late 1930's and about 1960, so keep in mind that some of these coins could have actually been pulled from circulation.

    image

    Next is the 1902-o, a coin that absolutely kills me. It's an AU55 detail, but this coin was just so dang nice and purdy that someone carved a "*" into the back of the coin with a knife. Replacing this one with an Unc. will be difficult and expensive.

    image


    Here is the 1902-S, a coin that probably retoned after a dipping. It has a little scratch under the word DIME, but I don't know if it is bad enough to keep it out of a slab. This is another very scarce issue that will be problematic to upgrade.

    image



  • rheddenrhedden Posts: 6,632 ✭✭✭✭✭
    Next round of photos...


    1904-p, a dipped & retoned AU that isn't so bad looking. This date is a lot scarcer in BU than many other P-mints of the post-1900 era.

    image

    1905-O, a coin that looks like a nice AU58 / MS62, but it turns out that it has a thin scratch that goes along the Liberty's neck/chin, which doesn't show up in the pics. I doubt it would slab.

    image

    1907-p, A really nice coin with no problems, probably a very choice AU58 that looks MS-62 at a glance.

    image

    1909-O. This coin is unique as it is the only one in the entire set that was submitted to PCGS and got a bodybag. That's right, the person who submitted these got 56 out of 57 coins in slabs, and only one bodybag! If my percentages were that high, I'd be real happy. That being said, it is tough to find anything wrong with this coin. Perhaps a light baking soda cleaning that didn't leave any hairlines on the coin?

    image









  • Beautiful coins.
  • MFHMFH Posts: 11,720 ✭✭✭✭

    Your posting this thread has me wanting to have my raw set holdered as well.

    What is the max dollar value we can submit per coin on PCGS's Economy service ???

    I'm in no rush...afterall, this set has been languishing in a bank vault for years. Should have some interesting toned coins by now ( due to the Dansco album ) . Have not really looked at the raw set for a year or two...just the holdered coins are brought out every so often.



    Mike Hayes
    ~~~~~~~~~~~~
    Coin collecting is not a hobby, it's an obsession !

    New Barber Purchases
  • rheddenrhedden Posts: 6,632 ✭✭✭✭✭
    Here are some of the early dates that are in PCGS holders. The 1892-S is an accurately graded MS-62, a nice BU coin with a few hairlines on the neck. This is a difficult date to locate in BU, considering that it's a first year of issue, and those are usually hoarded.

    image


    The 1893 proof is a very obvious cameo sitting in a PCGS PR64 holder. This might get sent back for a designation review. It has enough hairlines to keep it at a 64.

    image

    The 1893-O is in a PCGS MS-62 holder, and I'd grade it MS-63. I like this coin a lot, and it's a very scarce date in BU.

    image

    The 1893-S is graded MS-63 by PCGS, but I think the 1893-O is a better coin. This one has a couple of obvious nicks on the cheek.


    image

    The 1894 proof is in a PCGS PR64 holdeer, and I grade it PR65 CAM. Going back for re-grading.

    image

    The 1895 proof is also graded PCGS PR64, but I'd put it at PR65 CAM with a good shot at PR66 CAM. This is a drop-dead gorgeous proof.

    image


    The 1895-o, which I already posted, is in a MS-63 holder, and I think it's accurately graded. I'm sending it back for re-grading to find out, due to the amount of money involved with this key date.


    image

    Here is the 1896-p, obviously undergraded at MS-63. It has one tiny nick on the face, and a few hazy streaks on the reverse, and a real gem look otherwise. I can't believe this isn't graded MS-64. MS-65 is not out of the question.

    image

    Here's the 1896-S, graded MS-64 by PCGS. If someone could please tell me how this coin got graded MS-64, while the 1896-p is an MS-63, I'd love to hear it. This coin appears accurately graded.


    image


    The 1897-s is an accurately graded MS-63 with a few nicks on the neck.


    image

    The 1898 proof is in a PCGS PR64 holder, and I grade it PR65 (probably not cameo).


    image


    The 1898-O is a really rare date in BU that I wish was an MS-65, but it's a 62, basically because the coin was poorly manufactured by the mint. It has a rough, striated planchet and a weak strike. Otherwise, this coin barely has a mark on it.

    image
  • originalisbestoriginalisbest Posts: 5,971 ✭✭✭✭
    Really nice set of coins, especially to see all at once. I don't care for the dipped out/cleaned look of the 09-O, I can see why that bodybagged - but I respectfully disagree with you on the '95-S, I think it would slab with no problem, and is well worth doing so.

    Great pics of great coins!! Thanks for taking the time to share...
  • TWQGTWQG Posts: 3,145 ✭✭
    great threadimage
  • RichieURichRichieURich Posts: 8,553 ✭✭✭✭✭
    It's great to see such a nice set of these. Most sets are Good or worse. Please let me know if you ever break up that roll of 1894-S dimes!image:

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

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