Pieces of eight?

Discussion in 'What's it Worth' started by Captainkirk, Oct 24, 2007.

  1. Captainkirk

    Captainkirk 73 Buick Riviera owner

    A guy at work has ten of these he found on a beach. can anyone identify this and give an approximate value? Thanks.
     

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  3. Jhonn

    Jhonn Team Awesome

    FAKES! Just kidding, I have no idea. Cobs seem to be kind of hard to identify. I think for average pieces they hover around the $150 range (from what I've seen).
     
  4. GDJMSP

    GDJMSP Numismatist Moderator

    Can you provide larger pics ?
     
  5. Captainkirk

    Captainkirk 73 Buick Riviera owner

    This is the only picture he supplied. I'd like to get my hands on the coins and post some better pictures. He just wanted a rough guess about the identity and value for now.
     
  6. GDJMSP

    GDJMSP Numismatist Moderator

    That's why I wanted larger pics, so I could indentify it. Yeah, it's a Spanish colonial cob - but is it a 2, 4 or 8 reale ? What mint, date etc. Is it genuine ? We need all that to approximate value.
     
  7. huntsman53

    huntsman53 Supporter**


    Better than that! I would find out which Beach and go looking for more coins on the Beach and in the water as well as look for the Spanish Galleon that they came from. That is, if they and the story that guy at work told are genuine.


    Frank
     
  8. Treashunt

    Treashunt The Other Frank

    Hey, Frank:
    Wanna meet me at that beach?
    Frank
     
  9. huntsman53

    huntsman53 Supporter**

     
  10. coleguy

    coleguy Coin Collector

    I agree they are more than likely Spanish Colonial. Looks to be hand punched which tells me it probably wasn't made in Mexico City. Probably from Cuba or Grenada, but of course, thats just a guess.
    Guy~
     
  11. Treashunt

    Treashunt The Other Frank

    Frank:
    Please don't be too mean to those poor folks from Florida, after all, they have to dream up new ways to louse up their state.
     
  12. GDJMSP

    GDJMSP Numismatist Moderator


    Why ? All coins from the Mexico City mint were hammered until 1732.
     
  13. coleguy

    coleguy Coin Collector

    I don't know, I've just never seen one with spilit rims from the Mexico City mint before. Usually when the rims split it is because it was hammered with very crude dies on subpar silver stock, not a classic sign of MC coins. Thats just been my experience, but I haven't seem specimens from every year stuck there either, so it's just an observation rather than stating a fact.
    Guy~
     
  14. huntsman53

    huntsman53 Supporter**


    Doug is correct on this! If the coins are genuine, then from their appearance, IMHO they could have been struck anywhere from the mid 1500's to the mid 1600's.


    Frank
     
  15. Captainkirk

    Captainkirk 73 Buick Riviera owner

    The guy at work, (We call him 'Bubba') , found ten on a beach in Florida several years ago. We are in Pennsylvania and the coins are in Fla, so no more pics available for a while.
     
  16. huntsman53

    huntsman53 Supporter**

    Well, I hope Bubba did not make the story up, that he actually found them and did not purchase them from someone that was lurking around the beach looking for unsuspecting tourists saying that they had found them and were willing to sell them! There are a lot of folks that sell this type of stuff at beaches and other areas where tourists flock to in Florida and tell a story how they found the coins while metal detecting. In most if not all cases, the coins are cheap Counterfeits sometime made in Shanghai, China but sometime produced locally or elsewhere.


    Frank
     
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