GTG...1941 D walker

Discussion in 'US Coins Forum' started by fish4uinmd, Sep 5, 2015.

  1. fish4uinmd

    fish4uinmd Well-Known Member

    Has anyone ever heard of a TPGer in Newport Beach, CA named Hannes Tulving?? Apparently, the SS launched a probe of them in April 2014. I just bought this coin from a dealer in FL. Sorry, I do not have a clear pic of the obv.
     

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  3. Duke Kavanaugh

    Duke Kavanaugh The Big Coin Hunter

    Tulving was a company that sold bulk metals until the market soured and they wend under recently.
    Never hear of them being coin graders or selling numismatic coins.
     
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  4. ldhair

    ldhair Clean Supporter

    I'll guess it's AU or MS. The reverse looks MS.
     
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  5. swamp yankee

    swamp yankee Well-Known Member

    Congrats on what should be a real nice piece if the obverse is as good as the reverse!Best of luck with it......
     
  6. fish4uinmd

    fish4uinmd Well-Known Member

    Thanks Yankee, I picked it up for $35 bucks! MS64 is the grade on the "slab".
     
  7. fish4uinmd

    fish4uinmd Well-Known Member

    When I receive it, I will post a decent pic of the obv...thinking about keeping it in the "slab" just as a conversation piece. I think the SS is still looking for this guy Tulving.
     
  8. fish4uinmd

    fish4uinmd Well-Known Member

     

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  9. Mike Thorne

    Mike Thorne Well-Known Member

    Hannes Tulving had a coin business many years ago that was ultimately determined to be a Ponzi scheme, and he spent time in prison. When he got out, he started a business selling precious metals in bulk. At some point, he began selling material he didn't have, and he went bankrupt. He did sell numismatic material at various times. I bought some high-grade, common-date Mercury dimes from him and also an 1892-CC $20 gold piece graded XF40 by PCGS. I subsequently sold it for about 3 times what I paid for it.
     
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  10. fish4uinmd

    fish4uinmd Well-Known Member

    Sounds like a real stand up guy...when did you buy the dimes?
     
  11. Mike Thorne

    Mike Thorne Well-Known Member

    I would guess the '90s.
     
  12. Mike Thorne

    Mike Thorne Well-Known Member

    One other thing: I write for coin magazines and did an interview of Tulving a little before the Ponzi thing broke. One thing I learned was that his uncle was a well-known neuroscientist/psychologist by the name of Endel Tulving. I also remember that he had his whole family (mother, father) working for his coin business.
     
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  13. fish4uinmd

    fish4uinmd Well-Known Member

    So it was coin Mafia.
     
  14. fish4uinmd

    fish4uinmd Well-Known Member

    Purchased this odd slab on Sept 5th...I think this Walker looks as good as some of my other 64's...but it does not show a full thumb. Your feedback: 1. Do you think it's worthy of a 64? and 2. Should I keep it in this slab as a conversation piece or have it regraded?
     

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  15. Mike Thorne

    Mike Thorne Well-Known Member

    Looks like a nice coin to me, with or without Hannes Tulving's name. The certified coins I bought from him were quite nice, and I nearly tripled my money on the CC double eagle.
     
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  16. H8_modern

    H8_modern Attracted to small round-ish art

    The coin is common but the slab and associated story is rare. Keep it as is.
     
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  17. fish4uinmd

    fish4uinmd Well-Known Member

    Thanks H8
     
  18. fish4uinmd

    fish4uinmd Well-Known Member

    Mike, thanks again for the reply.
     
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