Pine Tree on Pawn Stars

Discussion in 'Coin Chat' started by Mat, Sep 26, 2011.

  1. Mat

    Mat Ancient Coincoholic

    I was watching a new pawn stars tonight and a 1652 pine tree was one of the deals. It was already NGC graded as damaged. She wanted $3,000, Rick offered $500 cause its worth $600, she declined and left.

    Catch the re-airings if you like.
     
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  3. Doug21

    Doug21 Coin Hoarder

    saw it, what is it worth ?
     
  4. zach67005

    zach67005 Active Member

    You see the 400 Morgans they played poker with? There were a few that looked BU.
     
  5. Doug21

    Doug21 Coin Hoarder

    so any realistic value on that coin ? I don't know that Colonial stuff well, but I bet Rick is way low ( as usual).

    I'd be willing to bet saharacoins would pay more on any coin than these guys.

    I saw the Silver dollars used, maybe some AU 21's in their "rack". I'm sure they know the Morgans well enough to pull out BU coins.

    Casino checks would make way more sense for a game like this instead of all ones.
     
  6. Mat

    Mat Ancient Coincoholic

    The certifacation of the coin is 2544860-001 if you wanna look on NGC, its a pretty rough coin. :/
     
  7. medoraman

    medoraman Supporter! Supporter

    $5 that it was set up months in advance, and she had no intention of selling. It was simply "made for tv, reenacted reality".

    Anyone ever seen that redneck PI show? Man, that is about the worst acting in history.
     
  8. davidh

    davidh soloist gnomic

    On this show, ALL televised transactions are set up in advance. It gives Rick a chance to bone up on the subject so that he can sound like he knows what he's talking about. It also gives him the chance to line up his "experts" to come in. This show is pure scripted drama and nothing else.
     
  9. Duke Kavanaugh

    Duke Kavanaugh The Big Coin Hunter

    If you mean Rick to be told about the item = Rick bone up on the item then yes :D
     
  10. Doug21

    Doug21 Coin Hoarder

    It's clearly staged, yet educational and the original of its' genre.

    I know my US Coins, but not this Colonial stuff....SO WHAT's IT WORTH ?
     
  11. 10gary22

    10gary22 Junior Member

    Look, this is a set up deal for TV. You cannot take a coin in and have them look at it, because they don't go into the store except to film. They hold auditions now. So don't put a lot of stock into what you see. This is entertainment, not reality.

    IMHO, fromwhat I learned when I took a jaunt down there,

    gary

    Do you think people in Las Vegas, play poker in warehouses ? Gimme a break. Only on TV
     
  12. l.cutler

    l.cutler Member

    I just checked the number on NGC and it is an Oak tree sixpence, not a pine tree. Is this the same coin? As far as value, colonials are not like regular US coins with pretty much a set value in different conditions. Given that, my own opinion is that $500 would be pretty low but definitely not a $3000 coin either.
     
  13. medoraman

    medoraman Supporter! Supporter

    Well I went there and Chumley was working at least. You saw a ton of people paying way too much for junk silver certificates and the like just to show they bought something in the store. The line to get in was an hour wait at 10am. Its actually much smaller store in person as well.
     
  14. illini420

    illini420 1909 Collector

    Yes, it was an Oak Tree. Based on the photos it's not in the best of condition, but I still think it's a $1000-$1250 coin, maybe even up to $1500 if someone fell in love with it. The shop was definitely trying to buy it cheap, but the seller wasn't in the ballpark either.
     
  15. StGauden658

    StGauden658 Junior Member

    Redbook 2012 list the Oak Tree sixpence at $750 in good condition.
     
  16. Collect89

    Collect89 Coin Collector

    The date was 1652. I would have guessed that.


    The Shillings were struck over several years but they are all dated 1652. Does everyone know why that is? Here is a link describing this numismatic trivia:
    http://www.coinsite.com/content/coinpics/1652pts.asp
     
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