1787 Connecticut Variety

Discussion in 'US Coins Forum' started by planman2014, May 3, 2017.

  1. planman2014

    planman2014 Active Member

    I honestly hate trying to attribute these. About half of the 1787 Connecticut coppers look freakin identical and the variations within variations that make it go from R.2 to R.7 are just not for me. I love dissecting a nice 1794 cent but not these.

    If anybody can/wants to attribute this and by some miracle it is a rare variety if I sell it I would give you 5%. No joke. I spent so many long hours looking for rare 1787 Conn and found nothing special. Odds are tiny.
     

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  3. Victor

    Victor Coin Collector

    They really are difficult. Most of the ones I've seen are quite worn which doesn't help.
     
  4. Insider

    Insider Talent on loan from...

    You may wish to buy a copy of the Whitman Encyclopedia of Colonial and Early American Coins. I saw two copies in the bookcase inside a TPGS while on a tour.
     
  5. ColonialCoin4

    ColonialCoin4 Active Member

  6. ColonialCoin4

    ColonialCoin4 Active Member

    Wait wrong link oops
     
  7. ColonialCoin4

    ColonialCoin4 Active Member

  8. planman2014

    planman2014 Active Member

    The book is great but a large amount of the 1787 are freaking identical. I mean the differences are so insanely minor it is beyond belief.
     
  9. ColonialCoin4

    ColonialCoin4 Active Member

    It is probably a transitional die usage. Maybe a R-4
     
  10. l.cutler

    l.cutler Member

    Not even close to a Muttonhead, the one in the link posted. The photos aren't the best to show the details needed to attribute it, but if no one gets it before then I can try later this evening. Some of them are really tough, the smallest details make the difference, the 33 obverses are some of the toughest.
     
  11. l.cutler

    l.cutler Member

    Sorry, just not enough detail in the photo for me. It may be one of the obverse 31 or 33 varieties, but that wouldn't narrow it down much I believe there are around 100 of those. Is there more detail in the punctuation than is visible in the photo? If so maybe different photos would help?
     
  12. planman2014

    planman2014 Active Member

    I will try. I believe one of the 33s but there are just so many subvarieties in there that it is tedious beyond words to attribute.
     
  13. l.cutler

    l.cutler Member

    Yup, 33's are the worst. I think there are something like 50 different obverses and with reverse combinations close to 100.
     
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