Pretty rough scudsy coin with lots of corrosion but it is an R-5 coin. CQR lists a scudsy AG-3 value at $250. Lots of detail left on this one so it may net down to about AG-3?? Not sure if I overpaid at $86 but the other S-180 coins were considerably higher on e-bay.
Looks like a candidate for some conservation. I can’t speak to the value. For me, it would be a pass, but some people can do some wonders with such coins.
Marshall beat me to it. Not a S-180, S-161 an R-1 coin. That rev cud trips up a lot of people into thinking they have a 180 rev of 161 op coin rev of 180
In the event that you run across the earliest die state of either of these two reverses (P on the 161 or CC on the 180) with the obverse unidentifiable, it would take some effort to distinguish between the two reverses. Differences between the two are more subtle than variations of strike on either. I suspect there was experimentation with a Hub Die in 1798 which led to the Hub die used in 1800 and this could be evidence for that. In this event, the touch up work with the fraction, bar and stems would be the key to distinguishing between them. If either reverse die (in it's early state before the breaks) were used with the other's usual obverse pairing , it could have gone unnoticed to this day.
Thank you. It matches my experience, but I don't recall reading it anywhere. But since Reverse CC matches the Reverse P so closely, perhaps it was used earlier or the S-161 was actually produced later.