XF-Details 1855-O Half Dollar (Shipwreck Effects), NGC Blue Core, SS Republic wreck

Discussion in 'US Coins Forum' started by Sallent, Jan 11, 2025.

  1. Sallent

    Sallent Live long and prosper

    Well, I have been meaning to add a shipwreck coin at some point to my collection. I figured if I was ever going to have a details coin, might as well be something from the bottom of the ocean versus something Billy Bob inherited from grandpa and cleaned in his trailer with spit shine.

    I kind of figured that it would be a Mexican or Spanish coin, but then this one crossed my path and I said.....well, why not an American one then? Paid $270, though I remember when these first hit the market back in 2004 or so, and the asking price being $800 to $1,000. I couldn't afford anywhere near that back then, and what a good thing that was in retrospect.

    Photoroom-20250110_224851.png

    Feel free to share any seated liberty halves you want, or your own shipwreck coins from wherever they may be.
     
    Last edited: Jan 11, 2025
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  3. Paddy54

    Paddy54 Well-Known Member

    1855 O/0 1715463092387_20240511_172703-02.jpeg 20240511_181112.jpg
     
    Last edited: Jan 11, 2025
  4. Paddy54

    Paddy54 Well-Known Member

    Your's the O/o variety pup die chip neck
     
  5. Sallent

    Sallent Live long and prosper

    Cool, I didn't even notice that until you mentioned it. Good to know
     
  6. Paddy54

    Paddy54 Well-Known Member

  7. Sallent

    Sallent Live long and prosper

    I had no idea that this was probably the beginning of "shipwrecked coins" as a thing until I started to read old threads from 2004.

    What a blast. People declaring that they would never accept that term, that these coins should have been body bagged or tossed away, had no one in their right mind would ever buy a coin that was corroded, or how NGC was trying to con the community by selling environmentally damaged coins with a fake label.

    And then you pass forward to today, shipwrecked coins are popular, there is a market for them, the term is accepted, and no one launches into an essay-long rant about them.

    Don't get me wrong, I would never pay problem-free prices for a salt water corroded coin from a wreck, but at the right price they can be kind of cool. And enough people seem to think so because there is a market for encapsulated coins from old ship wrecks.
     
  8. Evan8

    Evan8 A Little Off Center

    I've shown this many times before but it's cool so....

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    DSCN7497 (2).JPG
    DSCN7498 (2).JPG
     
    nerosmyfavorite68 and Sallent like this.
  9. ksparrow

    ksparrow Coin Hoarder Supporter

    I have looked at a lot of the El Cazador coins at shows, and many look cleaned up or severely corroded. I found this one at the last local coin show in the fall, and decided to take it.
    el cazador 8R obv.jpg el cazador 8R rev.jpg
     
    Evan8, nerosmyfavorite68 and -jeffB like this.
  10. Paddy54

    Paddy54 Well-Known Member

    Try finding a 1 peso Philippian that doesn't have that shipped wreck damage on it.
    Just about every one were crated before the Japanese invasion and dumped in the Manila bay. Even at war time price of silver an oz. wasn't going to be captured by the invaders .
     
  11. Paddy54

    Paddy54 Well-Known Member

  12. Paddy54

    Paddy54 Well-Known Member

    Mel Fisher and company ..... the day the Atocha was found. 20190706_131025.jpg 20190706_131411.jpg MVC_001S.JPG
     
    nerosmyfavorite68 likes this.
  13. Sallent

    Sallent Live long and prosper

    That one has probably retoned since it was pulled out and cleaned, but they are all cleaned because you obviously can't just simply pull a coin out of the ocean and put it straight into a slab with all the salts and minerals from ocean water.
     
  14. nerosmyfavorite68

    nerosmyfavorite68 Well-Known Member

    tibaug06.jpg

    TIBERIUS & DIVUS AUGUSTUS AR tetradrachm. Alexandria, Egypt. TIBEPIOY KAISAR SEBASTOS, laureate head right. Reverse - QEOS SEBASTOS, radiate head of Divus Augustus right. Milne 38, Koln 48. 24mm, 8.3g.

    Likely a sea-find, this coin is lighter than its contemporaries due to leaching of the baser metals.

    I like sea finds. My final sea find (although I think it was a river shipwreck, in this case) is an unphotographed small cob, which I bought at a coin show about 15 years ago.
     
    ksparrow likes this.
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