My first Barber Half (1912)

Discussion in 'What's it Worth' started by Themeparkphoto, Dec 21, 2007.

  1. Themeparkphoto

    Themeparkphoto New Member

    (Aplolgies if this shows up twice! I think I hit "Preview" and never bothered to press "Post" because it never showed up.)

    Here's my first Barber Half! I'm new to collecting, and want to get a sample of some common types to start with. Very slowly, one every few months, I'm getting a nice sample of some US coin.

    I thought this one looked particularly nice. It's ungraded, as you can tell from the cardboard holder.

    I have little concept about grades. What do you guess this is? (I know it's hard to tell from a photo made through the plastic in a coin holder...)
     

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  3. Indianhead65

    Indianhead65 Well-Known Member

    First, welcome to the forum!! What you have there is a 1912 Barber Half dollar. As far as the grade goes, its very hard to tell from those pics but looks to have very nice detail. Maybe you could post a few larger pics if you can...that would certainly help and get you more opinions.
     
  4. Mark Feld

    Mark Feld Rare coin dealer

    Larger images might help, but in the mean time, my guess is that the coin is in the low AU (AU50 to AU53) grade range. And welcome.
     
  5. Themeparkphoto

    Themeparkphoto New Member

  6. clembo

    clembo A closed mind is no mind

    Great detail but I think it's been cleaned.

    I'm seeing this on the obverse. Think it was whizzed.
     
  7. Speedy

    Speedy Researching Coins Supporter

    Fixed!

    Speedy
     
  8. Indianhead65

    Indianhead65 Well-Known Member

    I'd have to give it an AU53. I'll also have to agree with clembo, it looks like its been cleaned.
     
  9. Treashunt

    Treashunt The Other Frank

    As Clembo & Indianhead stated, it looks cleaned.
    That's the bad news.
    The good news: it sure looks like an AU.
     
  10. Mark Feld

    Mark Feld Rare coin dealer

    It might have been cleaned - I can't tell for certain from the images. But I see no evidence of whizzing, a term that many people apply incorrectly.

    "whizzing
    Term to describe the process of mechanically moving the metal of a lightly circulated coin to simulate luster. Usually accomplished by using a wire brush attachment on a high-speed drill."
     
  11. clembo

    clembo A closed mind is no mind

    I've heard of people "whizzing" with rock tumblers hence my statement.
    The obverse seems to have the tell tale scratches this would cause. Can't say for sure though as I don't really see it on the reverse which wouldn't really make sense.

    Either way it's still a nice coin.
     
  12. Themeparkphoto

    Themeparkphoto New Member

    I'll take it out of the holder and rephotograph it properly. This was just put on a flat-bed scanner.

    If it is a true "AU" that would be nice, because according to the "red book" these coins aren't that common in the better grades....
     
  13. Treashunt

    Treashunt The Other Frank

    Very true.
     
  14. GDJMSP

    GDJMSP Numismatist Moderator


    This method is sometimes used to hide the fact that the surfaces of a coin have been altered. It makes the coin appear to be an ordinary circulated coin.
     
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