Dear All I have a 1874-S Trade dollar with a photo inside for a lady dressed from that time. if Could help please in 1.How can I track this coin 2. The value of this coin Thanks
Hmmm.... 1. Is the photo "actually" inside the coin to just "with" the coin? 2. Do you "actually" have/own this coin or is this one you're considering to buy? 3. What do you mean by "track" the coin? 4. Value is related to grade...do you have a picture to share?
I discovered that the coin can be opened when dropped on the tile, the photo is inside for a lady I think from that time, the photo is in black and white. I have a picture can't upload it now. It looks it was costume-made for that person
do you have any Idea on the Value? I checked some websites it could reach up to $17,000 when it has S , but not like this coin that could be opened, you can google for the image of the coin ( 1874 trade dollar, 420 grains 900 fine) you find many images
if the photo was inside the coin then it wouldn't be a real trade dollar. posting a picture of the actual item would help a lot
It could be a novelty coin made from a real trade dollar , but your pics are not clear enough for me to tell if it was a real Trade dollar . If it was a real I'd say it could be worth around $50 up to $100 . But in reality chances are that it's fake . Still I'd love to see some larger clearer pics to tell if it was once a real coin .
What has me intrigued is the dentils or lack of them . If it was real and machined to be a little picture holder thats the part that would be machined . Also if it was made to carry a picture of a loved one around in someones pocket it could be well worn like the ops piece . Granted this is all speculation without clearer pics , but so far that's all we got .
I'd like to see a photo in the "open" position. I believe this would have to be made from two coins (as Larry stated).... but it's hard to tell the authenticity from the pictures provided.
There are a lot of fake Trade Dollars out there, of many different types. Yen is the most common, but we sent so many over there, without handling it to see, the coin could be real, or it could be a fake. Regarding the photo, the odds of a victorian era photo surviving WWI and WWII, and whatever other small conflicts the places the coin has been have been involved in, inside for over 100 years are fairly slim. There are many fake Victorian era photos out there. Some made with actual photo chemicals of the day and done on original photo paper so even C14 dating won't prove things one way or another. What the description tells me is this is a novelty item and very probably fake/counterfeit. The tip off is in the post heading. 420 grains, 90% fine. Yes, real, unaltered, trade dollars fit that description. However, once you hollow it out so you can stick a photo in it, no way should the weight not change. Therefore if it still weighs 420 grains, then it is made of something other than 90% silver.