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Half Dime experts..a quickie

1854 Date overlaps base Breen #3069, Breen says "rare" how rare are they really?
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which based on the under of this thread being at 5, is probably pretty dang rare!
“We are only their care-takers,” he posed, “if we take good care of them, then centuries from now they may still be here … ”
Todd - BHNC #242
I own more half dimes than the total number of people in the world who collect half dimes.
With all due respect to the venerable Walter Breen, many of his statements relating to relative rarity must be taken with a large grain of salt. If we try to apply the Sheldon rarity scale to any of the Liberty Seated half dimes, I would argue that probably all except the 1839-O V1 Large O would rate just an R1, or common. For such a high mintage series, we must apply a very different rarity scale in order to express relative rarity. Such a modified scale was proposed by Dick Osburn in an excellent article on availability and rarity of Liberty Seated Half Dollars which appeared in Issue #76 of the Gobrecht Journal, quarterly journal of the Liberty Seated Collectors Club. In a subsequent issue of the Gobrecht Journal (Issue #79, November 2000), I wrote a similar article on the relative rarity and availability of Liberty Seated half dimes, and applied Dick Osburn’s modified rarity scale to that series. In that article, I wrote of the 1854 V1 Date Overlaps Base variety as follows:
“The 1854 half dime is the second most common date in the series. The 1854 V1 half dime is sometimes referred to as the ‘Date Overlaps Base’ variety. While this is an interesting variety, it is not scarce, as numerous examples can be found in grades up to and including EF. This variety, however, becomes scarce in grades of AU and above.”
I would certainly stand by these comments today, and consider the 1854 V1 to be readily available with only a little bit of searching. My own reference collection contains fifteen (15) examples, the finest being an attractive AU-58. Indeed, on eBay right now there are at least three examples for sale, as follows:
(I do not own any of these coins, nor do I have any financial or other interest in them; they are merely presented here as examples)
http://cgi.ebay.com/1854-Seated-Liberty-Half-Dime-G-US-Coin-/110613883825?pt=Coins_US_
http://cgi.ebay.com/1854-Std-Half-Dime-Date-Rock-Breen-3069-EF-/300508485691?pt=Coins_US_Individual&hash=item45f7b3983b
http://cgi.ebay.com/1854-Arrows-MISPLACED-Date-Seated-Liberty-Half-Dime-/110648569917?pt=Coins_US_Individual&hash=item19c32b303d
I'd place the following business strike dates as R3- or better (<500 known): 40 wd, 40-0 wd, 44-0, 46, 48 LD, 53-0 na, 63, 64, 65, 66, 67, 68. There are probably others but those are my favorites. Some of these dates probably have 200-300 known, possibly less. And of course as you get to problem free XF/AU pieces and Uncs, many dates become R5 to R7. Didn't list the 70-s for obvious reasons. There are certainly other varieties as well. There are a dozen or two inbetween dates with 500-1200 known that I didn't list. And some of those might fall into that list (42-0, 52-0, 53na, S mints, etc.). Considering that "great rarities" like the 1901-s quarter with thousands known (ie low R-1) the "common" half dimes don't look so common. I'd guesstimate that one third of the seated half dimes are rarer than the 1901-s quarter.
roadrunner