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I have half dime 1842-o AU need help

Hi All cu,
I need help I have half dime 1842-o and I think pretty AU even MS? If you know about collector half dime for serious business. I will send you and grade if approved AU or MS? let me know
that half dime 1842-o come from my grandpa give me I put safebox bank since 1969 and recently I pull out first time last week.
Thanks
I need help I have half dime 1842-o and I think pretty AU even MS? If you know about collector half dime for serious business. I will send you and grade if approved AU or MS? let me know
that half dime 1842-o come from my grandpa give me I put safebox bank since 1969 and recently I pull out first time last week.
Thanks
0
Comments
"Everything is on its way to somewhere. Everything." - George Malley, Phenomenon
http://www.american-legacy-coins.com
<< <i>I not have picture zoom. >>
And you have no acquaintances with a basic digital camera? Are you in a remote 3rd world location? Your response also did not acknowledge my secondary question.
"Everything is on its way to somewhere. Everything." - George Malley, Phenomenon
http://www.american-legacy-coins.com
EAC 6024
<< <i>
<< <i>I not have picture zoom. >>
And you have no acquaintances with a basic digital camera? Are you in a remote 3rd world location? Your response also did not acknowledge my secondary question. >>
honestly when i see illiteracy like that and/or very similar it is my first presumption and/or a recent immigrant or just posting from abroad
not to be negative in any way but i know when i see certain speech patterns the person is usually, not as comfortable with our ways so to speak
thusly requiring a great deal of assistance to accomplish some simple tasks
.
Note to LanceNewmanOCC - according to the OP's profile, he is a domestic resident, and by the remarks in the OP, he has been a resident for over 40 years here.
"Everything is on its way to somewhere. Everything." - George Malley, Phenomenon
http://www.american-legacy-coins.com
but the flat heads kept the group at MS64. But the surfaces were nicely toned and basically gem. Up until that time I wasn't aware of a decent unc for this date and I was
very interested in locating an all there choice to gem specimen. It was probably the one O or S mint half dime that I would die for at the time and where the odds of finding one might
actually be realistic. But that hoard popping was quite unusual. I seem to recall a price of $4,000-$5,000 per coin, my pick. But I couldn't get pass the flat heads and corresponding flat
reverse wreath/bow area. The coins were essentially identical so at the asking price you had 1 of 5, and no real bragging rights to the best one known. That was a lot of coins for that
time as most of the rarer O mints probably didn't have more than 1 or 2 nice ones known, if any. So all of a sudden a choice 42-0 was more available than say a gem 41-0, 50-0 or 56-0.
It really wasn't until PCGS started certifying coins that previously unknown seated rarities started showing up with some regularity. In the 1975-1986 era there was really very little
that showed up from half dimes to halves.
So there's probably at least a dozen choice/gem ones now known as I have also seen a holdered nearly full head 65 that didn't look like it was part of that original mini-hoard.
PCGS/NGC list three 66's. One would think there could be up to 15-20 uncs known of this date. The date in honest and lustrous AU may actually be rarer than the uncs as the chances
of one of those being plucked out from circulation before it became a more commonly seen F-XF was pretty remote. A lot of these no doubt got melted in 1850's.
"Everything is on its way to somewhere. Everything." - George Malley, Phenomenon
http://www.american-legacy-coins.com
you even sell on eBay with pictures
take a picture and post it here. Forget the zoom.
(and keep selling on the BST only)
<< <i>Yes today I went coin shop and 2 dealers look and more deeply look finally its EXTRA FINE and I will get my son set up picture tomorrow night. >>
Maybe or maybe not. 1842-0 typically comes with a weak or non-existant head and rev bow knot. I could see a typical B&M shop calling a fairly lustrous
AU55 coin as XF45 just based on not knowing striking details. Most shops will grade more on details than they do on luster. You have to use both.
If your coin has a flat head but obvious field or peripheral luster, I'd bet it has true AU details.