Counterfeit Source Coins and the fake 1796 S-93 Large Cent

Discussion in 'US Coins Forum' started by Jack D. Young, Oct 3, 2020.

  1. Jack D. Young

    Jack D. Young Well-Known Member

    I have started a project of illustrating the probable genuine source coins we have found with their deceptive struck (counterfeit) clones in one summary document.

    To that end I have built a base article in the Blog section of the EAC (Early American Coppers) website for anyone interested. I am developing sections for each we have documented and the 1st pass has a link to the 1793 "S-5", 1796 S-85 and 1798 S-158 large cents in the source section.

    sections.jpg

    As I am in the process of finishing the section on the 1796 S-93 I thought it a good example to post here.

    This variety was initially reported back in 2016 with a lone ANACS graded example known. We quickly found a 2nd that had been submitted to NGC and through continuing research we found the apparent genuine source coin.

    Images are from my summary and include comparisons of the source (on the left) to the NGC example in the 1st set, the ANACS example on the left in the next, the major attribution mark on the "O" and the examples time-line.

    source-clone.jpg
    1796 S-93 Genuine Source (image HA) NGC determined counterfeit (courtesy NGC)

    clones.jpg
    TPG certified example NGC determined counterfeit (courtesy NGC)

    O.jpg
    Timeline.jpg
    The source is a well documented example and is pedigreed to the Mass Historical Society and purportedly photographed by Breen, and recorded in Noyes; we should be concerned about losing a significant pedigreed example to the counterfeit “process”- hopefully someone out there has given it a good home and can let us know it is still accounted for...

    intro.jpg
    The last image is of my attribution page which also will be found on the EAC website's Blog tab.

    att sheet.jpg
    My evolving summary document can be accessed through the EAC website at http://eacs.org/; you will need to click on the Blog section. From there you will see and click on "Documented Source Coins for the latest Deceptive Struck Counterfeits" and then click on the link below on the next page.

    EACS Blog.jpg sources-eac-2.jpg
    There are many articles only available to EAC members on the Blog and main sections of the website (you can easily join on line!) but I intend for this article to be open to the public and I will add sections as I go.

    Best, Jack
     
  2. Avatar

    Guest User Guest



    to hide this ad.
  3. Jack D. Young

    Jack D. Young Well-Known Member

    This post faded quickly:D...
     
  4. Publius2

    Publius2 Well-Known Member

    Jack, I see you posted this Saturday night but it only appeared in my listing this morning (Tuesday). Keep up this good work and I look forward to seeing your postings on the blog.
     
    Jack D. Young likes this.
  5. SensibleSal66

    SensibleSal66 U.S Casual Collector / Error Collector

    Thanks very informational !
     
    Jack D. Young likes this.
  6. KBBPLL

    KBBPLL Well-Known Member

    If I'm reading this correctly, a former MA Historical Society coin ended up in the hands of counterfeiters? Despicable.
     
    Jack D. Young likes this.
  7. Jack D. Young

    Jack D. Young Well-Known Member

  8. Mainebill

    Mainebill Bethany Danielle

    Thanks again. Hopefully all the counterfeiters will get Covid maybe that’ll slow em down a little
     
    Jack D. Young likes this.
  9. SensibleSal66

    SensibleSal66 U.S Casual Collector / Error Collector

    Meow at Mainebill ! lol
     
    Mainebill likes this.
  10. SensibleSal66

    SensibleSal66 U.S Casual Collector / Error Collector

    what about the 1803 Large Cent ?
     
  11. Jack D. Young

    Jack D. Young Well-Known Member

    Which 1803 large cent SensibleSal66?
     
  12. Jack D. Young

    Jack D. Young Well-Known Member

    Thank you Publius2!
     
Draft saved Draft deleted

Share This Page