He had one other. A 1884 Morgan in a soldered holder with the reverse side ornate carving with 3 initials. This one had more info and was older with classic script writing. Also, this one was original and the Morgan one was polished.
I can’t see a love token without looking up the name. Looking around, I couldn’t find any images of people that could be her, but I found this. The time seems about right. https://www.findagrave.com/memorial/9269112
Amazing. I was just thinking... she had the obverse lathed off this coin when it was GEM BU, then her Papa carried it to work in his pocket everyday for 40 years.... Just fantastic.
Of course, if that's the right grave, then why didn't the wife and/or Clara choose to be buried with Papa? What's the rest of the story?
Beautiful love token. Does anybody know how jewelers engraved those coins. Back in 1877 I don't think they had electric engravers
Great piece! As far as @Kirkuleez's ID goes, that's often about as good as you can hope for. The middle initial helps narrow things down in this case, since Clara Howard's first and last name were both pretty common. If it weren't for findagrave.com, I often wouldn't have found the backstories of some of the folks on my love tokens. It's really fun when you can find a photo of them [*1] [*2], or a colorful news article. [*1] [*2]
These were done by hand. It's largely a lost art. Yes, there are still some extremely skilled engravers out there today - and some of them make exceptional "hobo" carvings on coins - but that kind of hand crafsmanship is mostly a thing of the past. Having a Trade dollar for the host coin is cool, too. Check the edge and rims carefully for hidden seams, to see if it's maybe a box dollar. That would add to the value considerably. A lot of Trade dollars got the "box dollar" treatment and were made into lockets and such. These are also sometimes referred to as "opium dollars" by collectors, for the hidden compartment inside them, though their supposed use for smuggling opium is probably more an apocryphal "urban legend" than fact. Most were lockets, and the "opium" legend got attached to pieces which had lost the original photographs they once contained. Check out the 1625 Bavarian "box thaler" that a friend of mine found. That was a really cool bonus discovery!
I always get different answers from people on how much these are worth; it seems to be highly dependent on the mood of the buyer and how much it is worth to *them*.
At that time people used pocket watches and frequently had the cases engraved. Many jewelers had engravers among their employees, including Tiffany's of New York. Some engravers made love tokens, either for customers or privately.