What's the value of this 1818 Bust quarter?

Discussion in 'US Coins Forum' started by The Half Dime, Feb 21, 2024.

  1. The Half Dime

    The Half Dime Arrows!

    Now I've really got to think about it. The bid is now $28! Hopefully it doesn't go much higher than that, though. As a collector, I want something affordable, and as a dealer, I want to both buy and sell at low prices.
     
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  3. Mainebill

    Mainebill Bethany Danielle

    An 1818 quarter unless it's a train wreck is worth plenty over $28. Evenas the most common large size date
     
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  4. The Half Dime

    The Half Dime Arrows!

    I think even a train wreck would be worth more. You could likely get $40 or more out of one that's holed, cleaned, corroded, scratched, and bent at the same time. That is, if you sell to an individual who wants a cull type set.

    Honestly I wouldn't want one with all those problems, but I do collect problem coins.
     
  5. atcarroll

    atcarroll Well-Known Member

    Looks like it was dipped about a hundred years ago. I've seen cleaned coins re-tone with a circam look. It's "market acceptable" so it gets a pass at other TPGs but not, it appears, at CACG.
     
  6. The Half Dime

    The Half Dime Arrows!

    CAC does have expert graders on their team, so it's quits good that they could recognize it. It would likely grade as cleaned from companies like PCGS, NGC, ANACS, and possibly ICG and/or SEGS. Self-slabbers would probably grade it as VG, problem-free and sell it for about $100-150.
     
  7. Mr. Numismatist

    Mr. Numismatist Strawberry Token Enthusiast

    This is Circulated Cameo:
    https://www.cointalk.com/threads/what-is-a-circcam-you-ask-look-and-see-and-post-yours.288335/

    1898 USA 50 cents.png
     
  8. The Half Dime

    The Half Dime Arrows!

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  9. Lon Chaney

    Lon Chaney Well-Known Member

    I believe you are associating cameo with proofs, which is not necessarily the case. Proof = polished dies and struck multiple times.
     
  10. -jeffB

    -jeffB Greshams LEO Supporter

    Yeah, "cameo" originally means "having sharp contrast between foreground/subject and background". You see it in modern proofs, and some classic proofs, but also in circulated business-strike coins where the fields are darkly toned and the devices aren't.
     
  11. The Half Dime

    The Half Dime Arrows!

    I see what you mean. It is slightly possible, though, that any classic circam coin with no mint mark is an impaired proof, as Philadelphia made those until 1964. The other day, I saw a circam 1820/19 half dollar, with very dark fields but silver looking Liberty and the eagle.
     
  12. okbustchaser

    okbustchaser I may be old but I still appreciate a pretty bust Supporter

    Cir cam...not impaired proof

    upload_2024-2-24_15-12-46.png

    upload_2024-2-24_15-15-11.png
     
  13. bikergeek

    bikergeek Well-Known Member

    I like to let the data talk. GreatCollections has an auction archive that may help. And yes, I know the URL is crazy long but the URL is clearly "www. greatcollections.com," for those (wise folks) who don't like to click blindly.

    Only a few Good Details in there and they predate CACG. But the photos may help. And the prices can be compared to the non-details version at grade to get an idea of how much a "details" designation may affect prices.

    https://www.greatcollections.com/Auction-Archive-A/US-Coin-Prices/11/Quarter-Dollars/37/Capped-Bust-Quarters/5322/1818-Capped-Bust-Quarter?af_c_sorthigh=false&af_c_sortdate=true&af_c_pcgs=true&af_c_cacg=true&af_c_ngc=true&af_c_pmg=true&af_c_anacs=true&af_c_other=true&af_c_plus=true&af_c_nonplus=true&af_c_cac=true&af_c_noncac=true&af_c_ungraded=true&af_c_busi_strike=true&af_c_spec_proof=false&af_s_yearfrom=&af_s_yearto=&af_s_keywords=&af_gd_min=65&af_gd_max=65&zoomgrade=<span+style="font-size:+18px;">Ungraded/Details</span>#<span+style="font-size:+18px;">Ungraded/Details</span>
     
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  14. -jeffB

    -jeffB Greshams LEO Supporter

    But you can usually tell whether a coin started out as a proof or a circulation strike, even when it's sustained some wear or damage. Squared rims, for starters, never mind die markers.
     
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  15. Kentucky

    Kentucky Well-Known Member

    Have they always been that way?
     
  16. The Half Dime

    The Half Dime Arrows!

    I'm honestly not quite sure.

    The final bid on the coin was $70, which is something I wouldn't pay for it, but then again, there's still a lot of Bust quarters left. I guess each person has their own coin uniqueness! :)
     
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