Hello again team.. edit: please see second set of images. Thanks. Still slowly going thru all of these coins. Found this one with a small envelope and exclamation point on it. Share your thoughts.
You will find, as you go along, and get used to what should or should not be in coins, that some people have saved and collected many strange items. I was once guilty of mis-naming things I thought were errors and wasted a lot of time and 2X2's, only having to tear them down when I gained the knowledge I need. This just looks like the mint mark took a hit in it's every day use. But if you look at these things too long they tend to appear as something they are not.
I certainly see what you're looking at. If that's just a P or a D, of course it's a normal 25C. This might have been saved because it was speculated to be a P on top of a D, or the other way around. I never heard of such a thing on these.
BTW, check the reverse on this coin also. These were known to have die cracks at the left wing edge. If so, that would make it a saver at least.
Just fyi my grandfather was a well versed nuismatic, belonging to nuismatic coin clubs from about 1960 or before then. I still have some of his club cards that were hand written. Wish i had hung around a lot more and learned more. Its the first one with an exclamation point.
Honestly, it looks like the P. It got hit by something along that left side, smashing that side down a little. I'd keep it if he kept it. I'm just looking at your pictures. Not that they're sub-par or anything, but pictures are one thing, seeing the coin is another thing. He evidently saw something there but couldn't quite put his finger on it. That's why he saved it without identifying it.
Thanks. I dont mind not knowing and i agree. What i am seeing in real life eyeballing looks like there is a bottom d with a p on top and there is a definite 2 layer look. Maybe if i took it outside in the sun and clean my lens it will come thru for others.
Your photo is fine. It is a P mint mark that took a direct hit which moved the metal to one side. Honestly, it really is not an error. I love errors and would never lead you in the wrong direction.
Ok try this set of images in which you can see the definite D print and the p outline. I could be wrong but this is hard to show with a non pro camera. I hope this helps you see what im trying to describe. AND THANK YOU FOR THE EXTRA TIME LOOKING AND COMMENTS.
You think p that took a hit? I had thought more likely a d that took a hit that dragged it down because there is a fully formed smaller D visible. 2 d stinks sometimes lol. Again thanks guys for looking.
As comparison here are p and d mint marks for 1991 quarters. I pulled these to compare which is why i thought it was a d
If you note the d extends to the left in a regular mint marked coin and the p is flat. As i am not so eloquently explaining, lol, it really looks like the d with a p blobbed on top of it to the eyeball and the rise is really hard to show and looks like it is pressed down into the d.
Also the p imprint has serif ends. This doesnt appear to have serif ends. _|_ tails on both sides of the bottom like the Roman iii when capitalized has at top and bottom.
Sorry, but as been said earlier, it's a P mm that took a hit. Notice all of the nicks on the rest of the coin. He may have thought he had something, but it's not.
Just think this way. We can't tilt these pictures and look at them from several different angles. We can't look at them under different light-settings and magnifications. Or, we can, but lots of good that does. That's what we're up against. He kept it for a reason. To be sure why, show it to people. Coin dealers. The graders at ANACS. Just ask what they think is going on. Having said that, even if we're right, it's just a damaged P, I'd still keep it because it's my grandfather's and he thought it was something special...but, that's just me.
Rock on. Thanks you guys. I have a mvb coin im posting in just a minute i think is doubled edge printing.