1941 Two-toned, Half Dollar: Has anyone heard of this?

Discussion in 'What's it Worth' started by hjahne, Jul 4, 2006.

  1. hjahne

    hjahne New Member

    Hi, I'm obviously a newbie around here (and to coin collecting too) and was hoping someone might have some insight for me.

    I've got a 1941 Walking Liberty half dollar that is 2 toned. That is, Liberty herself and the round part of the sun are gold (or some other gold colored metal). I can't seem to find any record of a coin like this anywhere. I've attached a picture (I think).

    Has anyone seen one like this?

    thanks!

    Hans
     

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  3. rocketman

    rocketman New Member

    That seems pretty suspicious to me because the bust is is the only part of the coin that is toned. I don't think its natural, but i'm also not a toning expert so don't take my word for it. Plus, am I wrong, or does toning usually start at the edge?
     
  4. hjahne

    hjahne New Member

    Thanks for the reply - perhaps I shouldn't have used the word 'toned' but I didn't know what else to call it. It looks intentional to me as well.
     
  5. B12

    B12 Coin Hoarder

    I doubt it's toning.Maybe someone painted it...the bust only?

    B12
     
  6. GDJMSP

    GDJMSP Numismatist Moderator

    Howdy hjahne - Welcome to the Forum !!

    It's an altered coin. Someone intentionally plated it.
     
  7. hjahne

    hjahne New Member

    Agree, I don't think it's 'toning' either. Bad choice of words on my part.Actually it's not just the bust. It's all of 'Liberty', the round part of the sun and the date. It doesn't look like paint or a marker to me. It actually looks like a different type of metal but I'm not sure. I don't think I want to scratch it to see how deep it goes either [​IMG]
     
  8. hjahne

    hjahne New Member

    Thanks Mod! Are you certain? It does look plated to me too if anything. I would assume that it's practically worthless then?
     
  9. The_Cave_Troll

    The_Cave_Troll The Coin Troll

    It is worth it's melt value which right now is about $4
     
  10. GDJMSP

    GDJMSP Numismatist Moderator


    Certain ? No, of course not, not without seeing the coin in hand. But I have seen plenty of them that were plated in exactly that manner and I would bet this another of them. As to value - CT is correct - it's worth melt.
     
  11. hjahne

    hjahne New Member

    Thanks again for the replies! Just out of curiosity, why would someone plate a coin like that? Would it be a carnival prize or souvenir shop piece?
     
  12. jackeen

    jackeen Senior Member

    Looks plated to me. Perhaps pursuant to it being used as a piece of jewelry.
     
  13. GDJMSP

    GDJMSP Numismatist Moderator


    Because they think they can sell it for more than they could if it was not plated. Believe it or not, there are many folks who collect these things. Just think of all the plated SQ's that have been sold. And they do the same thing ASE's as well.
     
  14. Twiggs

    Twiggs Coin Collector

  15. Shortgapbob

    Shortgapbob Emerging Numismatist

    I would definitely say that someone plated the design elements of the coin. Its still a silver coin though!
     
  16. mr22601

    mr22601 New Member

    im kinda curious in what the coins weight if in fact the inlay is gold wouldnt that increase the melt value to more then the approx amount of 3 to 4 dollars for the silver? just wondering,
     
  17. satootoko

    satootoko Retired

    Gold is one of the most malleable metals known, and the amount used for the kind of partial coin plating used on that coin will be worth, at most, a couple of cents when gold hits $1,000. :eek:
     
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