Well here is my silly question of the day. This is all damage correct. The only reason I even bothered to post this is due to the metal at the point where it meets the T is the same height. Thanks for more than likely wasting your time.
@ddk2881 had already been advised of the typo, acknowledged it, and laughed about it before this chain started. I assume the rest of the comments were just feeding on the original funny. Coin Collecting is fun.
I don't know about you guys, but whenever I have gone through a whole bunch of coins, circulated, common stuff, my hands stank! It's hard to even describe the smell of old coinage mixed with body oil. Steve
LOL. Reminds me of a couple I know. He worked in a gunsmith shop while dating his future wife; she thought the Hoppe’s No. 9 solvent smell he always had was his cologne. She loved it. Steve
Although no a mint error, save this coin with others to hand off to child or grandchild as a somewhat unique result of circulation. My interest is in what made the imprints. Perhaps someone in this coin community might have an idea. If it is recognized and identified, then you can add this explanation with your coin. Coin collecting is preserving history, enjoy and pass it on!