Copper coin ~15mm with Indian Princess gold dollar design

Discussion in 'US Coins Forum' started by LQ413, May 12, 2026 at 9:29 PM.

  1. LQ413

    LQ413 New Member

    Hi all, first post. I’m looking for help before I decide whether to wear a piece of jewelry. I'm not a collector myself but inherited a coin charm bracelet assembled by my grandfather in the 1960s from a box of miscellaneous coins he purchased. Most of the bracelet is identifiable: there's an 1866 Napoleon III French Empire coin, an Edward VII British piece, and others from around the world. One coin has always been the odd one out and I'm hoping someone here can help. I’ve done as much googling as I can and am stuck.

    Physical description: Copper/bronze colored, clearly not gold (which is different from the entire rest of the bracelet), 15mm diameter. Obverse: leftward-facing portrait consistent with the Indian Princess design, fairly clear despite wear. Reverse: central "1", below it what could be "DOLLAR", below that what must be a worn date in very bad shape, wreath around the perimeter. The edge isn’t visible due to being mounted in a bezel on the bracelet.

    Provenance and backstory (family oral history, take with appropriate salt): My grandfather purchased a box of miscellaneous coins in the mid-1960s. In the 1970s he brought it to the Smithsonian, where a curator apparently examined it, looked disappointed, and said something to the effect of "I thought we had the only one of these left in the world." I have no documentation of this other than family stories.

    What I'm trying to determine: I want to understand what I have before making a mundane decision: is this worth insuring, or can I just wear the bracelet without worry? If it turns out to be something significant I'd consider finding it a good home with a serious collector, but that's secondary.

    Is this consistent with any known pattern or off-metal error? Does the Smithsonian anecdote ring any bells for anyone with deep coin knowledge? Photos attached — happy to provide more with different lighting. I understand the bezel is a problem for proper examination and am aware it would need to come off before any formal authentication.

    Thanks in advance for any guidance.
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  3. fretboard

    fretboard Defender of Old Coinage!

    Welcome to CoinTalk, unusual medal but I have no idea what it is, I mean it's obviously a copy of a US $1 gold coin but from that point I'm lost. :shame: That said, maybe someone else will chime in who knows exactly what it is. Feel free to post more pics of your coins as we love to learn and share knowledge. :cigar:
     
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  4. Spark1951

    Spark1951 Accomplishment, not Activity

    I don’t know if this will help or not, but I googled:

    “Indian princess copper 1 dollar”. The AI info mentioned pattern copper dollars in the 1870’s.

    Up to you to trust the AI data, but this may give you a vector to pursue.
     
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  5. Collecting Nut

    Collecting Nut Borderline Hoarder

    Don’t know about the piece itself but it’s from your Grandfather and nothing can be more precious than that and the story that goes with it.
    Welcome to CT.
     
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  6. SensibleSal66

    SensibleSal66 U.S Casual Collector / Error Collector

    It's a family heirloom now. What could get any better than that. ;)
     
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  7. Randy Abercrombie

    Randy Abercrombie Supporter! Supporter

    That is quite the anomaly. I would carry that to a coin dealer and ask him to scan the piece with an XRF. That will tell you the composition of the metal. Beyond that, I don't really have any good suggestions.
     
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  8. Mr. Numismatist

    Mr. Numismatist Strawberry Token Enthusiast

    The design doesn't match other gold dollars and it's base metal. I'm going with (contemporary?) counterfeit pocket piece.

    I circled a few of the differences.
    1.png
     
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  9. Mr.Q

    Mr.Q Well-Known Member

    Based on your description - ancient copper coin, obverse: crowned head facing left, reverse: a 1 above center - the most likely match is a late Roman bronze coin (often called LRB) especially from the Constantinian era (circa 330 - 350 CE).
    Obverse: A ruler's bust facing left or right, often wearing a laurel wreath or radiate crown. coin-identifier.com
    Reverse: Simple symbolic designs, sometimes including standards, numerals, or marks that can resemble a "1." especially when worn. CoinWeek
    Located on Copilot. Nice coin, thanks for sharing, hope this helps.
     

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