Interesting finds in rolls.

Discussion in 'Coin Roll Hunting' started by Tski90, Nov 24, 2016.

  1. Tski90

    Tski90 Active Member

    Found these in penny rolls. Has anybody seen the WY stamp before? Thanks for any info. Also how did the 83 get rough like that? It's the same on both sides. 20161124_120316.jpg
     
  2. Avatar

    Guest User Guest



    to hide this ad.
  3. paddyman98

    paddyman98 I'm a professional expert in specializing! Supporter

    1 - That Native looks angry
    2 - Plated Cent. Environmental Damage.. maybe Saltwater
    3 - Counterstamp.. could mean anything
     
  4. Diplodocus

    Diplodocus Active Member

    Here's some I've found:
    P1030889.JPG

    #1 I've seen a few of these Panama pennies appear in circulation over the years.

    #2 Often called plating bubbles; little gas bubbles that appear on pennies from around this year. EDIT: Now I agree with @paddyman98 that the middle cent you posted is instead a worn, plated coin with environmental damage, more likely.

    #3 A counterstamp. The state counterstamped Lincoln cents were sold commercially in sets and show up in circulation every once in a while.
     
  5. jensenbay

    jensenbay Well-Known Member

    WY is for Wyoming... the state.
     
    NOS likes this.
  6. Tski90

    Tski90 Active Member

    Wow, I had never seen counter stamps before, also when you say sold commercially does it mean not intended for circulation? Thanks for the replies as well
     
    paddyman98 likes this.
  7. Mad Stax

    Mad Stax Well-Known Member

    I personally find counterstamps interesting, but they have no premium value, at least not common modern ones. Counterstamps are applied to a coin after it has left the mint.
    When he says they were sold commercially that is referring to a person(s) unaffiliated with the US Mint.
     
  8. Tski90

    Tski90 Active Member

    Ahh. Thank you
     
    Mad Stax likes this.
Draft saved Draft deleted

Share This Page