I'm not real hopeful about the Stone Mountain. Scads of replica souvenirs of the South were a mainstay of such places as Stuckey's a half century ago.
Who told you the "half dollar" (it's a commemorative) was real? Beefer is right on point. In 1880 they made less than 2000 proof trade dollars. 1880 P Proof Only 1,987 It would be a $3000 coin if it was real. The old: It was my grandparents coin and I don't know anything about coins. Is the oldest coin scam in the book.
Old safety deposit boxes are not immune to fakes. My husband's Grandfather had a handful of coins--mostly circulated Morgans, a few Booker T.s BUT, did include a fake California fractional gold. His GF was the one ripped off though, not anyone buying from 'Grandpa's Box Sale'. That said, there was also a circulated 1880 proof trade dollar too. I can't remember the weight off the top of my head but it was extremely close...a 6-8% variance is WRONG unless it's very heavily worn. The diameter was also correct, the look was correct (the toning not to everyone's taste) and more importantly, it's now in a PCGS slab. 'AU details, cleaned'. This is how a circulated proof looks: Not quite a $3000 dollar coin, but it's still nice, and more importantly has a tremendous amount of sentimental value for my husband. edited to add: here is a nice discussion on weights https://forums.collectors.com/discussion/986965/how-light-is-too-light-for-a-poor-trade-dollar
The early ones coming out of china were just a pot metal of various mixtures that contained no silver, but today, they are silver, have almost perfect detail and the weights are pretty spot on. If you don't know what you're with trade dollars, you will be burned.
As we say in Minnesota, uff da! The denticles on the left on the obverse should never look that weakly struck (on a proof, no less). Steve
i just cleaned them.i am sure now that the trade dollar is fake even if its silver.i think the half dollar is real
I'll start. Well, now you pray that they're fakes, because if not you just cost yourself a whole_bunch of money.
Well if the Stone Mountain is real as some have said, then you made a good deal. Until you cleaned the 1925 commem half dollar.
No, not really. I only mention it for those who might be swayed into thinking that cleaning is a "normal" process in numismatics, not because you should deserve to be beaten for these two.
After cleaning, it really doesn't make much difference whether the Stone Mountain is real or not. That coin isn't exactly in high demand as a details grade.