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A challenge for the hotshot numismatists: What is this thing?

MrEurekaMrEureka Posts: 24,668 ✭✭✭✭✭
image
image

There's some info on Mike Byers' site, but I don't think he has it quite right.

There's more at USPatterns.com.

Let's see if we can poke some holes in the current thinking on this piece, and figure out how it was made, and when.
Andy Lustig

Doggedly collecting coins of the Central American Republic.

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

Comments

  • ScarsdaleCoinScarsdaleCoin Posts: 5,434 ✭✭✭✭✭
    I was going to say splasher.... whats the prize to the winner?
    Jon Lerner - Scarsdale Coin - www.CoinHelp.com
  • tmcsr69tmcsr69 Posts: 1,307
    It looks like something lordmarcovan dug up.
    Crazy old man from Missouri
  • CoinRaritiesOnlineCoinRaritiesOnline Posts: 3,689 ✭✭✭✭
    All right sir, I'll give it a go.

    Based solely on those photos, I can't be sure it is a product of the mint at all. I wonder if it was some artifact of a button making operation in the mid 19th century. I'm not condemning the piece -- it is just a stray thought at this point...
  • commoncents05commoncents05 Posts: 10,099 ✭✭✭
    I was going to guess contemporary counterfeit die trial.

    -Paul
    Many Quality coins for sale at http://www.CommonCentsRareCoins.com
  • PerryHallPerryHall Posts: 47,502 ✭✭✭✭✭
    Looks like a splasher.

    Worry is the interest you pay on a debt you may not owe.
    "Paper money eventually returns to its intrinsic value---zero."----Voltaire
    "Everything you say should be true, but not everything true should be said."----Voltaire

  • Looks like a die trial strike in an off metal....lead maybe??????? just a guess
    Fountain of Useless Information
  • notwilightnotwilight Posts: 12,864 ✭✭✭


    << <i>Looks like a splasher. >>



    splasher noun, pl. splashers: any of several silver dollars used by George Washington as practice before he was successful in throwing one across the Potomac River.


  • << <i>I was going to say splasher.... whats the prize to the winner? >>


    image

    "I am sorry you are unhappy with the care you recieved, is their anything I can do for you right now, how about some high speed lead therapy?" - A qoute from my wife's nursing forum

    "I predict future happiness for Americans if they can prevent the government from wasting the labors of the people under the pretense of taking care of them." – Thomas Jefferson
  • RegulatedRegulated Posts: 2,994 ✭✭✭✭✭
    It looks to me like something they pulled off of a matrix, although I would rather spend time looking at it in person.

    What is now proved was once only imagined. - William Blake
  • LALASD4LALASD4 Posts: 3,602 ✭✭✭
    It could be anything. Someone could be practicing on how to make a die, or someone got bored and started engraving on a piece of metal. Who knows.image
    Coin Collector, Chicken Owner, Licensed Tax Preparer & Insurance Broker/Agent.
    San Diego, CA


    image
  • MrEurekaMrEureka Posts: 24,668 ✭✭✭✭✭
    It would be useful to read the info provided via the two links in the OP.
    Andy Lustig

    Doggedly collecting coins of the Central American Republic.

    Visit the Society of US Pattern Collectors at USPatterns.com.
  • Aegis3Aegis3 Posts: 2,935 ✭✭✭
    It's a private restrike, related to some half eagle restrikes and the "Dickeson 1792" restrike issues (eagle on shield, eagle on rock). Daniel Carr had an example of this die mated with an "eagle on full shield" die in copper on ebay some time ago. The thread, sans pictures, are here.

    But now I see you are already aware of that...
    --

    Ed. S.

    (EJS)
  • PistareenPistareen Posts: 1,506 ✭✭✭
    That's one of my favorite pieces of lead.

    I described it here.

    My write-up and Mike's description look oddly similar. image

    Andy -- the provenance of this piece, while not published, adds credence to a Mickley connection.

    Mike's assertion that it was struck at the US Mint is in opposition to what my cataloguing said, to wit, "This piece was produced as an after product of a central reverse punch that was disposed of by the U.S. Mint."

    It's an interesting item and I had a lot of fun trying to puzzle it all out once upon a time.
    John Kraljevich, Director of Numismatic Americana, Stack's Bowers Galleries
  • IGWTIGWT Posts: 4,975
    From JK's write-up:

    In the November, 1878 Ebenezer Mason catalogue of that collection, lot 916 was described as "1 Hub; rev., United States Twenty-five Cent Piece, about 1820."

    As I understand it, dies were frequently called "hubs" at the time; so, what happened to the die that was used to make this OP piece (which debuted at the 1887 Lyman Low auction sale of Linderman's collection as Lot 119)?
  • MrEurekaMrEureka Posts: 24,668 ✭✭✭✭✭
    I just knew Pistareen couldn't resist a thread with this title! image
    Andy Lustig

    Doggedly collecting coins of the Central American Republic.

    Visit the Society of US Pattern Collectors at USPatterns.com.
  • The known facts: 27mm dia.,187.8grains,2mm thick. Lead. Combines a 1823/2 with a full shield that was from scrap die. Assumed facts: Probably struck by Dickeson from scrap dies outside the mint. Struck sometime later. Dr. Linderman could possibly have been involved and was known for his "midnight minter" habits for himself/his acquaintances/officials,etc. The unknown facts: Described as a planchet. May have been from an 1828 reverse hub die. Described as a die trial piece. Eliminate: Die trial piece, because if it was, it would have been struck at the time, i.e., 1823/1828. Eliminate description as a planchet in the strict sense of the word, when describing a numismatic planchet. Eliminate die trial because it would not have combined 2 different designs. The questions: Fantasy piece ? Contrived piece to deceive for monetary gain? Simply scrap, from scrap dies that a plausible story has been presented to make this piece a historic and numismatic value added presentation? Just some thoughts, Respectfully, John Curlis. PS-I have taken into account the shape of the "planchet".
  • Type2Type2 Posts: 13,985 ✭✭✭✭✭


    << <i>The known facts: 27mm dia.,187.8grains,2mm thick. Lead. Combines a 1823/2 with a full shield that was from scrap die. Assumed facts: Probably struck by Dickeson from scrap dies outside the mint. Struck sometime later. Dr. Linderman could possibly have been involved and was known for his "midnight minter" habits for himself/his acquaintances/officials,etc. The unknown facts: Described as a planchet. May have been from an 1828 reverse hub die. Described as a die trial piece. Eliminate: Die trial piece, because if it was, it would have been struck at the time, i.e., 1823/1828. Eliminate description as a planchet in the strict sense of the word, when describing a numismatic planchet. Eliminate die trial because it would not have combined 2 different designs. The questions: Fantasy piece ? Contrived piece to deceive for monetary gain? Simply scrap, from scrap dies that a plausible story has been presented to make this piece a historic and numismatic value added presentation? Just some thoughts, Respectfully, John Curlis. PS-I have taken into account the shape of the "planchet". >>

    image But I think it's J-A1823-1imageuarter Dollar


    Hoard the keys.
  • Respectfully, it seems that Type2 (and I, for I am guilty of having the intent) cast a large Lure into the water and there are not any bites on this interesting subject. Sincerely, John Curlis. PS: Thank You MrEureka for these types of Threads.
  • HyperionHyperion Posts: 7,464 ✭✭✭

    no way....

    Ebay L@@K Estate Sale Antique Coin SILVER GOLD nice original surface BU UNC PCGS NGC ANACS PCI
  • RWBRWB Posts: 8,082
    Re: Brief comment about Linderman and assumed clandestine production of delicacies for his collection.

    In reading through what is left of the Linderman correspondence and the various affidavits related to the attempted seizure of his collection (post mortem), I have to question whether much of this was really surreptitious. There are quite a few references between Linderman and Pollock (Philadelphia Mint Superintendent - A. Loudoun Snowden later enters the picture) about striking additional examples of pattern designs in off-metals, as well as references to various lead, copper and other experimental and trial pieces being sent to the director and others. Linderman also maintained an extensive display of mint products (coins and medals) in his Washington office and used it to impress members of Congress, political visitors and international guests.

    My hypothesis is: much of what we call surreptitious was actually requested in writing and that the documents simply no longer exist. Linderman collected many of the items that would have normally been discarded as well as openly requesting specimens in correct metal and base metal. (Compare Linderman’s collection to that of R. Coulton Davis.)

    Item #1: The Philadelphia Mint commonly made pattern, experimental and trial pieces of work in progress as well as almost complete designs. We have few of the in-progress pieces because they were just working materials and, except for the ones Linderman and a few others collected, were thrown away. We do have many examples of patterns that are actually incomplete designs – the original documents say they were incomplete – but we’ve lost some of that by over-zealous editing and assumptions in various publications.

    Item #2: According to documents from the 1870-1880s, examples of pattern and experimental designs struck in copper (and possibly other base metals) were not done to create some “delicacy or rarity.” Such items had little numismatic value at the time, rather, as in the examples of copper silver dollars struck for Thomas Acton of the NY Assay Office, base metal was used because the recipient didn’t have to pay for the silver or gold content – i.e.: they were “almost free.” [Examples of the proposed Barber and Morgan standard silver dollar were available in Dec. 1877 in silver (if you wanted to pay for them) or copper (if you wanted a free sample). The same apparently applied to the later Goloid and metric patterns including Stellas.]

    OK – I realize the above is heretical and contrary to “received wisdom,” but it is what the remaining documentation seems to be saying.

  • Now that was a pretty good bite and worthwhile. The "perceived wisdom' is certainly not a wall of certainty and is subject to Breach(as it should be). I think there is merit to your reasoning that experimental pieces were not created to be a delicacy of rarity(love that phrase).However, I think it is an open question as to whether or not the "experiments" had an official purpose. If not, what rightful place do such creations have in numismatics? Was the tinkering just that-a coffee break amusement? Respectfully, John Curlis
  • RWBRWB Posts: 8,082
    Most of what collectors call "patterns" are really experiments - design and placement of detail, size, alloy. When you look in the original documents, they are often called "experimental pieces." (The most obvious example are the EHR $20 - everyone at the time called them "experiments.")

    In that era, there was no way to be sure a design worked, except to try it -- note the multiple changes of detail on Morgan dollars. Jefferson nickels went through a dozen minute changes before final approval, etc.
  • What I am really reaching for is the particular piece discussed in this Thread and, to a degree, those like it. If a good story fits as an explanation, should this be the official position? Respectfully, John Curlis
  • DoctorPaperDoctorPaper Posts: 616 ✭✭✭
    It was interesting to hear about "Linderman." For those of you who are fans of the show "Heroes," Linderman is an arch villian in that TV sci-fi show. One of his characteristics that he has a purloined collection of varoius works of art including paintings and various cultural artifacts like ancient swords and armor (didn't see any coins). I suspect the name Linderman is not an accident. The writers of both "Heroes" and "Lost" are very erudite, and many of the characters' names in those shows relate back to real, but obscure individuals in relevant ways.
    Wisconsin nationals: gotta love 'em....
  • Thank You DoctorPaper. See, I knew I was right...Linderman was questionable. Why else would the TV writers make a character with the same name? image Respectfully, John Curlis. (Very enjoyable piece of information. I would sure like to ask the Writer who he based the character on.)
  • firstmintfirstmint Posts: 1,171
    I'll add my two-bits worth...

    When Pistareen (JK) showed me this lead piece, of the reverse "unfinished working die" that was seen begininng on the 1823/2 Bust Quarters, at the John Ford sale in June of 2004, I didn't think it was a US Mint product because the lead was to dark and because of the unfinished "texture". This was struck from an unfinished reverse working die.

    It is not from a master hub puncheon (even though this was the condition of the hub in 1823) as this reverse die was used throughout the remainder of the Capped Bust quarter production until 1828. Steve Tompkins, who is just now finishing an early US Quarters book (some 450+ pages worth) has determined that this reverse die was re-engraved to add the middle claw and lower arrowhead on the four different new dies which were created after 1823.

    This was Robert Scot at his ultimate - (totally messed up) - but given to cheif coiner Adam Eckfeldt to be used anyway. Scot died in 1823, within a year after this die was used on the 1823/2 quarters which were delivered in February 1823.

    This was a "scrap die" that was sold by the Mint, apparently going to Montroville W Dickeson. He ended up with numerous dies which he made low grade trial piecs from in the 1860's. At the time, he was the leading "authority" on US Coinage based on his Encyclopedia's that were printed in 1859, 1860, and 1865.

    Interestingly, there exists a copper piece similar to this lead piece, except that the central portion of the motto is missing.

    More on the research about the working dies and one main hub used for the 1815-1828 quarters will be found in Tompkins' book, which is scheduled to be released at the ANA show in Baltimore this August.

    PM me if you are looking for U.S. auction catalogs
  • mozeppamozeppa Posts: 4,431 ✭✭✭
    I see lead people!




    image
  • savoyspecialsavoyspecial Posts: 7,359 ✭✭✭✭
    mozeppa, you are not right!! but i see them too

    lol
    greg

    www.brunkauctions.com

  • firstmint, Thank You for your thoughts,which appear to align with the points stated. This piece and its' place in numismatics remains, at best, unclear, with conjecture and no definite solution to purpose. It is an interesting story line, but that is all. The copper piece, which MrEureka referred to, may(and I stress may) have claim to a higher plane of clarity. mozeppa, you may have discovered the original etch and sketch and the real purpose of this piece. Respectfully, John Curlis
  • RegulatedRegulated Posts: 2,994 ✭✭✭✭✭
    It seems to me that either a matrix or a master die for the eagle and scroll portion of the quarter reverse must have left the mint, later being used to make these pieces.

    What is now proved was once only imagined. - William Blake
  • notwilightnotwilight Posts: 12,864 ✭✭✭


    << <i>I see lead people! image >>



    So that would date it to Bev Doolittle's productive years.
  • Regulated, I assume you mean scrap? Thank You for the clarification. Respectfully, John Curlis
  • krankykranky Posts: 8,709 ✭✭✭
    Very enjoyable thread, all!

    New collectors, please educate yourself before spending money on coins; there are people who believe that using numismatic knowledge to rip the naïve is what this hobby is all about.

  • mozeppamozeppa Posts: 4,431 ✭✭✭


    << <i>mozeppa, you are not right!! but i see them too

    lol
    greg >>



    there's many others in there too.

    cow and a gorilla!


    okay....................i'm bored!image
  • RegulatedRegulated Posts: 2,994 ✭✭✭✭✭
    All sorts of things were sold as scrap (or so we are told). I just don't think that this piece was a die - obviously, it is missing dentils, denomination and legend...

    What is now proved was once only imagined. - William Blake
  • Would you eliminate a punch from a trial die? Consider the dark color, the composition, the size and the plethora of persons involved in the "original" birth of this "planchet". Respectfully, John Curlis
  • firstmintfirstmint Posts: 1,171
    David -

    Although it can't be completely confirmed, I believe there were no hubs or matrixes ever released by the U S Mint. They were most likely melted when no longer needed or usable. This is most likely what happened to this damaged hub.

    We know there was a die made using the hub in 1823 for the 1823/2 quarters. That's how we see the reverse damage to the hub at this point in time. The condition of the hub rendered it unuasable after this time.

    When Kneass got the job as engraver in January 1824, he used this damaged die (made in 1823) and hand punched the missing portions that you outlined. This was standard practice for most working dies at the time.

    Becasue of the re-construction work needed to make the design proper, there was little use for this die (only 4 new ones from 1823 to 1828). That's why the Capped Bust Quarters saw every possible working die from the past being used to finish the production of the large diameter quarters. It also helps to explain the three year gap in production between 1828-1831.

    There simply wasn't a usable large sized quarter hub anymore.
    PM me if you are looking for U.S. auction catalogs
  • RegulatedRegulated Posts: 2,994 ✭✭✭✭✭
    If you examine both the white metal piece and the copper "Dickeson" coin, each has the same die striations in the fields; however, the Dickeson piece has what appears to be die damage in the scroll. my guess would be that an incomplete die was pulled from a matrix, it wasn't properly hardened, and was used to strike the white metal piece, then endured some sort of damage and was used to strike the Dickeson piece. And yes, I am making this all up as I go along.

    What is now proved was once only imagined. - William Blake
  • I would appreciate the thoughts, at this point, of MrEureka, the OP of this interesting Thread. Respectfully, John Curlis
  • firstmintfirstmint Posts: 1,171
    One further bit of evidence to support the die theory is that the shield lines are hand engraved. This would have been a blank area on a hub. But this was already done on the working reverse die used in 1823.

    Also, a hardened hub would not have broken apart in small portions (as seen in part of the motto) whereas an old working die might have ended up with damage after being stamped once again after 40 years.

    edited to add - Steve Tompkins told me today that the missing portion of the motto was not caused from later striking damage; it was from the lack of metal flow, as the raised globe on the other side "took away" that missing center section. It was not due to post striking damage.

    He also related that he will be giving a talk about open collar hubs and dies, used for the silver coinage, at the EAC/JRCS gathering in Dallas on May 9th.

    There is one further validation point that this later "fantasy piece" was struck using an incomplete working reverse die, but you will have to wait until Steve's talk, or get his early quarter book when it comes out this fall.

    As to whatever happened to this reverse die after the 1860's, is anyones guess. It has not been seen, written about, or heard of since then.

    PM me if you are looking for U.S. auction catalogs
  • IGWTIGWT Posts: 4,975
    Unless I missed something, David and Karl are in agreement, but might have misunderstood each other. Edited to add: And I still want to know where the puncheon (avoiding use of the word "die") ended up.

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