1783 Nova Constellatio from FUN Show

Discussion in 'US Coins Forum' started by Publius2, Jul 16, 2024.

  1. Publius2

    Publius2 Well-Known Member

    I picked up two early coppers at the FUN Show: This Nova and a Connecticut Draped Bust Left in AU-58. The Connecticut was from Syd Martin's collection but I can't show it here as the slab was cracked and the dealer is sending it back to PCGS to be reholdered.

    But here's the Nova. It's the Crosby 3-C variety with Blunt Rays and CONSTELATIO is misspelled using only one L. The reverse is rotated a full 45 degrees.

    Experts have argued over which side is the obverse and which the reverse. I tend to call the date side the reverse but you can make your own choice and no one will really gainsay you.

    These coppers were the result of a 1784 private joint venture of Gouverneur Morris, Robert Morris and William Constable, the inspiration derived from the abandonment of the idea of a Federal Mint. Consensus seems to be these were struck by a private mint in Birmingham, England and that 1783-dated coins were actually struck in 1785. Design inspiration seems to have derived from the Nova Constellatio Pattern Coinage that displayed the decimal units of a "bit" of 100 units, a "quint" of 500 units, and a "mark" of 1000 units.

    They circulated as money in the Confederation as attested by the worn nature of many survivors. A few years later they were devalued in commerce and many became undertypes for Connecticut, New Jersey and Vermont coppers.

    1783 Nova Const Obv-Rev-side.jpg
     
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  3. SensibleSal66

    SensibleSal66 U.S Casual Collector / Error Collector

    Love these old Coins and especially the CT. Coppers of which one I own. Hey, I'm from there what can I say. LOL. biggrin.gif
     
  4. Randy Abercrombie

    Randy Abercrombie Supporter! Supporter

    I love the history associated with the Nova Constellation pieces. I was bound and determined to find myself one and my only standard was that I wanted a clear and discernible eye. I finally found one, but it sure isn't as well struck as your example.
     
  5. ksparrow

    ksparrow Coin Hoarder Supporter

    That's a really nice Nova, thanks for the review on the history of these.
    I have a couple, a rare 4-c that is in pretty rough shape, and a blunt rays that is a little nicer (with a small planchet inclusion that shows up as a white dot).
    nova constellatio obv pcgs.jpg nova constellatio rev pcgs.jpg
     
  6. Eduard

    Eduard Supporter**

    Those are very nice examples you guys have posted.

    My own example, well.., not so nice (but it was very cheap), part of a lot of US coins I bought many years ago.
    Nova Constellatio Cent - OBV:REV - OKP.png
     
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