Help needed

Discussion in 'US Coins Forum' started by gabepn, May 11, 2023.

  1. Lon Chaney

    Lon Chaney Well-Known Member

    Interesting how the OP has been a member since 2012, but this seems to be his 2nd or 3rd thread. And he hasn't been back in a couple days. This seems like a coin I would like to check back in on opinions. And something this remarkable didn't come up 10 years ago? When the OP first signed up? It's been in his family since 1877, supposedly.
     
    KBBPLL and SensibleSal66 like this.
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  3. gabepn

    gabepn Member

    Yes, True I honestly don’t have any idea if it a real or fake one. I wish they would give the speciations of these types of coins. I been on PCGS NGC ANAC and the red books, and no ifno on it the metal compensation which is copper or other
     
  4. gabepn

    gabepn Member

    I really am happy to have your comments. They do mean a lot and just wanted to thank you all for your knowledge and expertise
     
    Chris lefave likes this.
  5. KBBPLL

    KBBPLL Well-Known Member

    @gabepn Got any details on this great great grandfather mint employee? Sometimes these family stories aren't entirely accurate. There are both silver and copper versions of this pattern; yours appears to be silver.

    I agree there should be specs available. https://uspatterns.stores.yahoo.net/18haldolpat.html under J1510 says "Note: The silver examples are the correct weight as expected. These were believed struck circa August-September per research by R.W. Julian with a design inspired by J1545 and have Morgan's initial "M" on Liberty's neck."

    The implication is that they weight the same as the regular 1877 half dollars - 12.5g. You could assume they're also the same dimensions - 30.6mm. The provenance and auction records at uspatterns might lead you to an auction listing that has the specs.

    Here is the TrueView (PR65) for one of the Heritage coins I posted earlier (which was in a NGC PF66 holder at that time).
    https://www.pcgs.com/cert/25522777

    I remain convinced that yours is fake, but it makes me curious how the dies were made, since only 5 of these are known to exist (9 if you include the copper versions). Perhaps someone was making replicas during an earlier era.
     
  6. Marshall

    Marshall Junior Member

    Was there only one pattern? I'm used to several with most coins.
     
  7. gabepn

    gabepn Member

    Exactly I would think that there would be more than one die and patterns. I know that I have seen documents stating that he work for the Philadelphia mint for 7 year dying of a cardiac desease at the mint. I could ask my uncle if he could send me the paperwork
     
    Cheech9712 likes this.
  8. KBBPLL

    KBBPLL Well-Known Member

    Just click the uspatterns link in my previous post for a list and links to details about the 44 different half dollar pattern varieties in 1877. If you're asking how many there are of this specific type, the answer is 5 known.
     
    Marshall likes this.
  9. KBBPLL

    KBBPLL Well-Known Member

    @gabepn you asked about specs, which implies that it would tell you something useful. So how about telling us the weight and diameter of this coin?
     
  10. justafarmer

    justafarmer Senior Member

    Could be I guess - but the OP's coin definitely wasn't struck by the same die pair as the two Heritage coins linked in KBPLL's post 17. You can count on it.
     
    Marshall likes this.
  11. mbogoman

    mbogoman Active Member

    Don't mean to beat a dead horse, but that's an obvious fake
     
    ksparrow and micbraun like this.
  12. Marshall

    Marshall Junior Member

    It's not a fake because it doesn't match a die known to the observer. There may be other known dies or even an unknown die. You can only exclude those dies you can show do not match. The assumption that you know all dies has proven to be a fallacy, even coins of 200 years of age.

    Specifically I'm thinking of the obverse (15) of the 1793 Liberty Cap (NC-6) which was not discovered until 1985. I discovered the third example 4 years ago.

    Patterns are even harder to exclude since they are often struck on differing materials than the standard planchet.
     
    Last edited: May 18, 2023
    Cheech9712 likes this.
  13. Marshall

    Marshall Junior Member

    delete duplicate
     
  14. Marshall

    Marshall Junior Member

    I think they also discovered 1922 Peace Dollars with a type 1 ultra high relief which was not known for years.
     
  15. micbraun

    micbraun coindiccted

    Are you guys serious? I don’t even need to see a picture of the pattern to know this is a counterfeit.
     
    mbogoman and KBBPLL like this.
  16. justafarmer

    justafarmer Senior Member

    In the same vein - while highly unlikely, NC-6 could be a counterfeit struck from contemporary counterfeit dies that the Numismatic Community has erroneously accepted as a genuine coin.
     
  17. Marshall

    Marshall Junior Member

    Except in this case, the 'new' example had a provenance older than the discovery coin and had been misattributed as S-16 until my discovery while researching S-16s.

    In fact, each of the 3 known examples was initially attributed as S-16. Also, having a known reverse with the new Obverse makes NC-6 an unlikely candidate as a counterfeit.

    But it is a consideration for future discoveries as the counterfeiting techniques are improving.
     
    Last edited: May 21, 2023
  18. Marshall

    Marshall Junior Member

    You should state the reasons for your confidence rather than just your confidence if it is so obvious. I could agree with it being likely more than a definitive conclusion because every pattern is distinct and often on atypical alloys and planchets.

    Every new discovery is unlikely statistically which is what makes them rare and often valuable. But it also means potential new finds usually have alternative explanations. Quitting the research prematurely is also a risk.
     
  19. ZoidMeister

    ZoidMeister Hamlet Squire of Tomfoolery . . . . .

    Unmarked reproduction coin. It’s weight will be off. Most probably a brass alloy.

    I picked up a couple similar off fleaBay. I'll post photos when I find them.

    Z
     
  20. ZoidMeister

    ZoidMeister Hamlet Squire of Tomfoolery . . . . .

    These all mimic known patterns and all have that yellowish tint to them.

    Interesting, but not real US Pattern coins.

    Z




    IMG_3333.JPG IMG_3334.JPG IMG_3335.JPG IMG_3336.JPG IMG_3337.JPG IMG_3338.JPG
     
  21. ZoidMeister

    ZoidMeister Hamlet Squire of Tomfoolery . . . . .

    A really good giveaway is the lack of detail in the feathers on the eagle and flat spots in Liberty's hair.

    Z
     
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