Options
1882 Hybrid Cal?
I recently picked this token up and I can't seem to find much info on it. I looked on the calgoldonline site and this wasn't pictured in the hybrid cals guide though it appears to be one. It appears to have a 4/2 in the fraction as well. Any help would be great.
GMan
0
Comments
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
Thanks for posting those pics.
I had it on the back burner to follow up. I will pull it out to verify if it is the same one.
Finding at least two or more of these will help legitimize them as a separate BG!
But don't get excited just yet!
<< <i>I think I have one of those 1882 1 over 4/2 also!
I had it on the back burner to follow up. I will pull it out to verify if it is the same one.
Finding at least two or more of these will help legitimize them as a separate BG!
But don't get excited just yet! >>
Is this a coin or a token? I don't see a denomination so it would probably be considered a token and wouldn't be eligible for a BG (for those that don't know, Breen-Gillio wrote the book on small denomination California gold coins and assigned each design type a BG number).
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
<< <i> Is this a coin or a token? I don't see a denomination so it would probably be considered a token and wouldn't be eligible for a BG (for those that don't know, Breen-Gillio wrote the book on small denomination California gold coins and assigned each design type a BG number). >>
Perry: Your comment is quite on target and thanks for bringing it up.. My previous posting sounded much more optimistic than I intended it to be. First of all, as you correctly pointed out for the Cal Fractional Gold (jewelers striking) pocket piece to obtain a BG number it would have to be dated 1882 or prior (period 1 or period 2) and secondly indicate DOLLAR underneath the 1/4 1/2 or 1.
The period 1 and period 2 pieces are not coins either even though they are referenced with BG attribution. All of them are a separate class of their own, considered as "California Fractional gold pocket pieces," technically considered much more as a token than as a coin.
This piece is most assuredly a period 3 pocket piece, meaning that it was most likely struck AFTER 1882, when the Feds shut down the Cal Fractional denominational Gold striking by jewelers, thus ending the period 2 era where jewelers could no longer reference the gold pocket pieces with "DOLLAR."
What I was referencing was the small possibility that this 1882 dated piece might have been struck in 1882 with the over-date 4/2 and "CAL GOLD" as the denominator to avoid confiscation by the Feds. If that is so, there is a small possibility that such piece might sneak in as a period 2, but unlikely.
Probability? 1 in 200. That is why I said not to get excited just yet.
That was why it was in the back burner in my list of things to do for so long.
BG-788:
Repost of original image:
Reverse 4/2 better pic. It's through the flip but shows the 4/2 pretty well:
Interesting thing. Am I correct that our host does not slab these?