1887 Liberty Head Nickel with German Silver stamp

Discussion in 'Coin Chat' started by Mountain Man, Oct 14, 2018.

  1. Mountain Man

    Mountain Man Well-Known Member

    I've had this coin for years and have always been curious as to why someone would stamp "German Silver" on the reverse. I vaguely remember reading somewhere that in the 20s or 30s, jewelers may have done this to distinguish it from a other metals. Anyone have any ideas or comments?

    1887 Liberty head nickel-german silver.jpg

    1887 5¢ German Silver.jpg
     
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  3. LakeEffect

    LakeEffect Average Circulated

    Seattlite86 and Mountain Man like this.
  4. Mountain Man

    Mountain Man Well-Known Member

    Thanks. I'll read it. It makes sense because it is copper and nickel, but why stamp it?
     
  5. SchwaVB57

    SchwaVB57 Well-Known Member

    German silver alloy was considered and tested by the mint as the composition of the Flying Eagle Cent. A variation was used as the final mixture to make the cents.
     
  6. LakeEffect

    LakeEffect Average Circulated

    Good question!
     
  7. Randy Abercrombie

    Randy Abercrombie Supporter! Supporter

    Granted it is quite a worn nickel. But the reverse is flat. Almost as though it is intended. I wonder if this nickel may have adorned an item in its lifetime and the German Silver stamp is in relation to the item the nickel may have adorned? Just wild speculation.
     
  8. Mountain Man

    Mountain Man Well-Known Member

    In doing further research, I wonder if this is a damaged 1883, not 87 and had at one time been gold plated to pass as a $5 piece, and someone stamped it so it wouldn't be confused and the gold was worn off? Just a thought.
     
  9. Mountain Man

    Mountain Man Well-Known Member

    Here are two close ups of the date. I don't have the ability to do overlays, but just doing a side by side comparison with similarly worn nickels from 1883 and 1887, I'm probably wrong, but I'd like to know what others think
    Photo on 10-14-18 at 4.43 PM.jpg

    Photo on 10-14-18 at 4.45 PM.jpg
    Could this be a damaged '3'?
     
  10. Conder101

    Conder101 Numismatist

    No it is a 7.

    Two possible thought as to why it might be stamped. The back is gone, no country or denomination, someone might have thought it was silver and took it to a jeweler who determined it was copper nickel and stamped it german silver because that was the closest stamp he had to the actual composition.

    Second and more likely, a manufacturer of articles made of german silver had a new stamp and wanted to test it out. Rather than use it on a finished product he grabbed a coin. After all after the test he could still spend it. Same reason a lot of coins get random counterstamps.
     
    Randy Abercrombie likes this.
  11. Oldhoopster

    Oldhoopster Member of the ANA since 1982

    @Conder101 Nothing more than my opinion, but I think your second theory sounds reasonable.
     
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