1864 indian head

Discussion in 'Coin Chat' started by Norman Asis, Sep 21, 2017.

  1. Norman Asis

    Norman Asis Active Member

    Good afternoon! Picked up this 1864 penny at a yard sale earlier. It's pretty beat up but a pretty exciting find for me. Wish it was in a better shape. In terms of , collectibility, how sought after is this year? Thanks IMG_20170921_123434451_HDR.jpg IMG_20170921_123448599_HDR.jpg IMG_20170921_123434451_HDR.jpg IMG_20170921_123434451_HDR.jpg
     

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  3. BooksB4Coins

    BooksB4Coins Newbieus Sempiterna

    As a generic date/type, they're fairly plentiful, but as you seem to know, the condition of this particular example will remove it from consideration for a vast majority of collectors. Still, it is a historically significant date and there's unquestionable "value" in that, even if it doesn't translate to money (assuming it is indeed 1864).
     
    LA_Geezer likes this.
  4. kanga

    kanga 65 Year Collector

    There's 3 major varieties for the 1864 LHC's.
    -- Copper-Nickel
    -- Bronze/No "L"
    -- Bronze/With "L"

    The "With 'L' " is the best but you'll probably have difficulty seeing that with your coin.
     
  5. Kentucky

    Kentucky Supporter! Supporter

    The Red Book is your friend. Now about trying to clean that dude...
     
  6. Norman Asis

    Norman Asis Active Member

    That's actually what I wanted to ask. Safest way to clean a coin without compromising it?
     
  7. Kentucky

    Kentucky Supporter! Supporter

    Wow, I opened the worm can... Copper coins are somewhat difficult to clean given the reactivity of copper. In the condition the coin is, it's not worth a bunch, but you would like to have a nicer looking coin. Let's start with some acetone or xylene if you have any. Soak the coin for an hour and see if the solvent gets any color, if so, change the solvent and give it another hour and repeat till the solvent is colorless. If you don't have any acetone or xylene, do water in the same way (distilled is best, but tap will work as long as you dry the coin off - pat, don't rub). You do seem to have some corrosion on there (the green spots) and we need to talk about them too, but get started with the water. If you are tempted to scrub it, don't use anything more abraisive than a toothbrush.
     
    LA_Geezer likes this.
  8. Norman Asis

    Norman Asis Active Member

    Lol, sorry Kentucky. This counts as your good coin deed for the day!
     
  9. Kentucky

    Kentucky Supporter! Supporter

    People just get really ansey about cleaning coins. You can totally destroy any value for a valuable coin by taking a wire brush to it.
     
  10. Norman Asis

    Norman Asis Active Member

    It's just that I have a dirt covered 1949 nickel that I've been itching to clean. A little apprehensive bec of possible irreversible damage I can cause to it.
     
  11. eddiespin

    eddiespin Fast Eddie

    Let's see it. We'll tell you what to do.
     
    Kentucky likes this.
  12. Kentucky

    Kentucky Supporter! Supporter

    Cleaning damage is always irreversible so it pays to go slow. Water (or distilled water if you have it), acetone (pure, not nail polish remover), xylene. If you need to "brush" use a toothbrush (don't use it for your teeth later...:)) and pat dry, never rub, just to be on the safe side. Don't hesitate to ask...you might get some sarcastic answers, but lots of good ones too.
     
    LA_Geezer likes this.
  13. Norman Asis

    Norman Asis Active Member

    Here's the nickel I got from Arco. IMG_20170921_175623296_HDR.jpg IMG_20170921_175647015_HDR.jpg
     
  14. BooksB4Coins

    BooksB4Coins Newbieus Sempiterna

    Other than, perhaps, tossing in a little acetone and hoping for the "best", I wouldn't bother trying to clean it. You're not going to improve this one (IHC), and as-is, at least it has it's, let's just say "historical crust". :)
     
  15. Norman Asis

    Norman Asis Active Member

    Got it! Thank you.
     
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