Options
Charlotte $5 Gold for under $500, bargain or blunder?
STONE
Posts: 15,275 ✭
Although I've always thought C and D gold was really cool, it has always been out of my price range, more often WAY out of my price range......UNTIL NOW!!!
Well sure C & D gold has been out of my price range, but that's because those coins are/almost problem free. That's why I'm still going to wait for my C and D gold for now
CharlotteDude, RYK, Longacre and other collectors, hows your take on the below piece?

Well sure C & D gold has been out of my price range, but that's because those coins are/almost problem free. That's why I'm still going to wait for my C and D gold for now
CharlotteDude, RYK, Longacre and other collectors, hows your take on the below piece?

0
Comments
500 would be a mistake in my mind even though it does have the
details of a 25-30.
so i am thinking in terms of paying what a dealer would pay because
i think i could find a chump to pay 500-550.
I cannot imagine someone paying more for it... unless they look at
the PCGS price guide for the date/mint and convince themself it is
a tougher date and put it a strong buy price for it. sigh
If you want a C mint half eagle.. do yourself a favor and save up 1500-2000 and be oh so patient.
``https://ebay.us/m/KxolR5
Now if you are purchasing good material it doesn't matter so much that it sits a while. A) you enjoy owning it and
Then again, to each his own
Coin's for sale/trade.
Tom Pilitowski
US Rare Coin Investments
800-624-1870
When I bought it I told myself that I could overlook the problem (a big rim ding), but after I had owned it for a day or two, whenever I looked at the coin, all I could see was the rim ding.
Fortunately, the dealer had told me I could return the coin, so I returned it a week after I bought it.
I've never regretted returning the coin, even though I haven't seen an affordable example of that coin since.
My advice: don't buy a problem coin, wait or stretch for a nice example if you have to. A nice coin is worth what you have to pay for it. A problem coin is a problem, no matter how little you've paid for it.
Check out the Southern Gold Society
www.brunkauctions.com
'dude
<< <i> It's a stretch to say the coin's been cleaned... surfaces & color look nice enough, judging from the pics,
'dude >>
so if it has a gold color the surfaces and color look nice enough?
please...
the coin is circulated down to vf30 details and has a few minor specks
of dirt remaining in the usual spots where you need a dentist pic to
remove it. One would expect an awesome patina from all that wear,
dirt in every crack from the filthy hands people had in the 1850s,
and an overall darker look which as usual only remains in the hard
to get at areas. Otherwise it was cleanedddddddddddddddddd.
Have you not seen enough pics that looked like that only to get the
coin in your hand and realize you were bamboozled? I have!
i am not quite sure what people think original surfaces on a circulated
coin should be anymore around here. sorry to state it so bluntly but
go take a gander at that original coin thread to see the sorry state
of collectors understanding what orignal, patina, and unmessed with
means. 1 out of 5 seems original while the rest decided to just post a coin.
oi. i have been around antiques too long to allow such talk to keep
passing over and over.
say it with me folks! "most old coins have been cleaned!"
now keep saying it over and over and over. coin collectors cannot
resist messing with coins.
to find just one that has a patina to it. this may give you an idea how
many have been scrubbed right up. It is like so many coins have been
cleaned, 150+ year old coins, that people see them and begin to forget
what original 150 year old antiques normally look like! Life was dirty
then. Oil cans, pants so caked with sweat and mud they would stand
on their own, working in the fields, you name it!
Original gold coins.. with a patina.. in circulated grades are the rarest
thing i can think of right now. Rant over.
of course.. if you think this is normal.. i can do nothing for you!
feel free to browse heritage and witness the played with coins.
http://coins.ha.com/common/search_results.php?N=51+790+231+397+1579+64
Buy the coin, not the problem.
I would pass on it for all the reasons already given. As has been noted, if something about it bothers you now just wait and see how much more you will notice that aspect of the coin in only a little time. Inevitably, the problem becomes the only thing you see. Save your money, coin in one hand, money in the other hand, and apply your money towards a problem free example sometime further down the road.
Check out my current listings: https://ebay.com/sch/khunt/m.html?_ipg=200&_sop=12&_rdc=1
'dude
<< <i>I'll stand firm by my comments. The coin looks original enough, certainly hasn't been scrubbed or hairlined. If you want to get technical, it looks like too much lighting was used. The '50-C looks nothing like the 41-C FC posted. Not quite as "crusty" as the '52-C either, but the '52-C was shot at much more subtle lighting. I'll reiterate, while I like the color and detail on the '50-C, the scratches/damage would be a deal-killer. SO while FC rants, I would say that if it wasn't for the damage, I'd consider the '50-C very nice at a VF-25/30 grade.
'dude >>
does ranting make me wrong? of course not.
while you try to use lighting as an excuse i can easily see the difference
in patina and dirt in the cracks between the coins.
the damaged coin in the OP was cleaned up and is the farthest thing
from original. the pictures are shot in the usual way people do to make barren
boring gold coins seem like something more then they are. Once in hand you
would look at it and realize you bought a dud damage or not.
i have a feeling if people wish to agree with me or come over to my side on what
defines a non played with coin a 150 years old in a circulated grade they would
have to step back and realize what they own for the most part is not original. I think they do not
care to do that and thus continue on looking at played with coins which are the
sheer majority for sale today and convince themselves if it is not hair lined to heck and back
it must be somewhat original.
I know i went through that stage and was quite disgusted to realize, for example, a 750 dollar
coin i bought was cleaned up, barren of patina, and typical of the coins for sale cleaned up
by collectors over the decades. Countless posts have been posted by members here who
lament why they cannot find walkers with a thick skin, gold collectors wondering why so
many gold coins are shiny like the sun, and copper people wondering why a proof is blue.
critical thinking skills, being able to admit you might have made a major mistake, and taking
advice from people you might not care (or like) for will allow you to grow in the hobby.
and dude.. do not take this post as directly towards you. you may have spurred me to
go on and on about it.. but it is a general post directed towards anyone who cares to
read it.
'dude
<< <i>The more I read, the more I can only shake my head and laugh. Have you seen the coin in hand, FC? If it gives you comfort to arbitrarily rubberstamp a coin as 'cleaned' because you've perhaps been burned in the past by misleading photographs, is one thing. Let that be a beacon for your personal choices whether to purchase or not. You shouldn't, however, be so geared up to slam a coin based on limited knowledge. Again, I stand by my initial statements.
'dude >>
shake your head and laugh eh? There is no nice way to say this.
after viewing your registry set and how you describe the coins you buy
there is no way in heck i would suggest someone coming to you for
advice on circulated half eagles and what is original.
I am truly done with you. I have a feeling most here are too polite to
knock you off your high horse. That always bugs me about coin collecting.
Too much happy talk and the ability of some to BS there way
through a post with no reasoning behind it. They get something in their
head, think they can buy some rare coins, and they must be right. I think
you have been confused since day one and still are!
"Owner's Description:
Deep, original green-gold coloration over semi-prooflike surfaces bordered by lustrous devices... nice crust! While not rare in comparison with other C-mint $5's, southern gold like this, with its original, crusty skin still intact is extremely tough to find these days. Although the mintage was nearly identical to the previous year's (at 64,823), the combined NGC/PCGS population is 80-90 coins more at 285-290 in all grades. My first Charlotte gold coin... purchased from Blackburn's Collectibles, Pacific Grove, CA, August 1991. "
42/92
Didn't wanna get me no trade
Never want to be like papa
Working for the boss every night and day
--"Happy", by the Rolling Stones (1972)
No matter how cheap it will just nag you til you get rid of it.
<< <i>for goodness sakes.. i had to look through 100 C half eagles in 25-35
to find just one that has a patina to it. this may give you an idea how
many have been scrubbed right up. It is like so many coins have been
cleaned, 150+ year old coins, that people see them and begin to forget
what original 150 year old antiques normally look like! Life was dirty
then. Oil cans, pants so caked with sweat and mud they would stand
on their own, working in the fields, you name it!
Original gold coins.. with a patina.. in circulated grades are the rarest
thing i can think of right now. Rant over.
of course.. if you think this is normal.. i can do nothing for you!
feel free to browse heritage and witness the played with coins.
http://coins.ha.com/common/search_results.php?N=51+790+231+397+1579+64 >>
While I usually find myself at odds with you on precious metals as a collector of branch mint gold I strongly agree with you, the number of surviving original crusty southern gold is very small and for some dates are practically non-existant I would say less than 10% for most issues. This is one area of the market that has some good long term potential as people can once in awhile stumble into a nice crusty coin selling for the same price as a processed coin.
``https://ebay.us/m/KxolR5
<< <i>Embellishments like "bargain" do not currently apply to this coin. Gold keeps going up, though. You may find over time that it was a great bargain inspite of the "abrasiveness" of the thread against the coin. >>
or not.
C'dude
C'dude
<< <i>As a final note to the unwarranted and extremely provocative slam made on my '49-C HE, I'll be at the Baltimore Show both Friday & Saturday. I pulled the coin from my SDB and will have it on hand at the show should any fellow forum member wish to view it for themselves for your own educated assessment, or if you just want to see a nice example of southern gold. I you're interested in seeing the coin, just PM me, and we can arrange a meet/greet/viewing anywhere within the confines of the bourse floor.
C'dude >>
Great idea 'dude! Please stop by our table (#304) as we'd love to see the coin in hand!
'dude
She sure knew how to get your goat.