Help with 1795 half dime

Discussion in 'US Coins Forum' started by ppratt3, Jul 29, 2011.

  1. ppratt3

    ppratt3 Senior Member

    A fellow member on a detecting forum found this coin and was looking for a little help. So I decided to post it here to see what you guys have to say. Grade, Variety etc..

    1795a.jpg 1795b1.jpg bestcoin.jpg
     
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  3. LostDutchman

    LostDutchman Under Staffed & Overly Motivated Supporter

    Wowzer... I'd say that coin is in the XF range.

    Hard to say if the surfaces are original or not. There looks to be something going on on the neck of the bust on the front... but it could have been made like that. That's a coin that definitely requires someone competent to look at it in hand.
     
  4. gbroke

    gbroke Naturally Toned

    Holy smokes, what a find.
     
  5. Merc Crazy

    Merc Crazy Bumbling numismatic fool

    Yeah, that's stunning.
     
  6. Hobo

    Hobo Squirrel Hater

    Wow! That is quite a find. I know very little about these things. My recommendation would be to send it to PCGs. Oh, and DON'T CLEAN THE COIN.
     
  7. lkeigwin

    lkeigwin Well-Known Member

    Oh my. That doesn't even look like a dug coin. Amazing.

    Can't say if it would grade cleanly but it deserves to be slabbed for authenticity. It has XF+ details. Could be worth $2-3,000 if it is genuine but with problems. Twice that if it grades cleanly.
    Lance.
     
  8. Doug21

    Doug21 Coin Hoarder

    It doesn't look like it came out of the ground.
     
  9. lkeigwin

    lkeigwin Well-Known Member

    For reference, here's an MS64 1795 Flowing Hair half dime I shot last week. It's a $35,000 coin (and not mine!).
    Lance.

    [​IMG][​IMG]
     
  10. Eduard

    Eduard Supporter**

    An amazing find. Congratulations to your friend.

    It seems to be a Valentine variety 4 (V-4 for short). It is rated as rarity 4, ie. scarce, more probably rare in that condition Grade wise I think this coin is at least AU.

    A simply incredible metal detecting find.
     
  11. vdbpenny1995

    vdbpenny1995 Well-Known Member

    BIG MONEY RIGHT THERE! I think it grade atleast AU!!!!
     
  12. thecoinlover

    thecoinlover Active Member

    WOW! Settle down! I'm thinking XF+.
     
  13. jello

    jello Not Expert★NormL®

    Thanks for sharing this one

    Nice 1795 half dime:thumb: one for sure!
    I like to have one or own, but $35K in not in my budget or zip code!!!

     
  14. Leadfoot

    Leadfoot there is no spoon

    Un-freaking-believable.

    My advice: Send to PCGS immediately.

    Presuming it's real (and I have no reason to believe otherwise), someone hit the jackpot.
     
  15. liberty1

    liberty1 New Member

    WOW!!! I would give half my collection for a coin like that!!! And that's saying alot for me.... Lucky man...
     
  16. Marshall

    Marshall Junior Member

    Call me a skeptic, but it looks too well struck and too good for the conditions described where it was found. I hope I'm wrong.
     
  17. davidh

    davidh soloist gnomic

    I don't disagree with the MS grading but with the weak areas on the obverse and that nasty scrape/scratch/rub and weak feathers on the reverse, MS64 seems a bit optimistic. I'd say it's closer to MS62. A modern coin would probably only make it to MS60 in that condition.
     
  18. mark_h

    mark_h Somewhere over the rainbow

    Great find for someone.
     
  19. lkeigwin

    lkeigwin Well-Known Member

    The "nasty scrape/scratch/rub" is not PMD. Those are adjustment marks.
    Lance.
     
  20. yakpoo

    yakpoo Member


    Beautiful coin! I don't have any half dime reference materials, but notice that many diagnostic differences between your coin and the OP's coin. Can you assign a die attribution to the OP's coin?

    EDIT: Oops...I just saw Eduard's post (V4)...thanks!
     
  21. Texas John

    Texas John Collector of oddments

    Much like some soils quickly destroy human remains while other soils preserve them, so can different soils either degrade coins or protect them.

    I don't know the circumstances or the posters. It could be that a skillful and cunning forger is trying to create a provenance, or it could be the coin spent decades lost yet nestled in a remarkably benign environment.

    Where was it found? Will the finder submit it to a TPG?

    If it's really a detector find, congrats to the hunter. You've become an icon of your hobby.
     
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