Welcome to Cointalk Your coin based on your photo is PMD (post mint damage) it isn't a mint error someone had to much time on there hands (vice job).JMO Dave
Notice that 'LIBERTY' is backwards? A die couldn't do that. Two coins were pressed together. Your coin is not an error.
Exactly what they said. The backwards letters should be a clue as to damaged in a vice and not a Mint error. Value is one cent so spend it or keep as a reference. Welcome to CT.
Dave - how do you suppose the impression of the word LIBERTY backwards could have been done? It is impressed across the shoulder from right to left.
Well, I don't doubt but don't want to do that. It looks like the word LIBERTY is raised letters. The method you described would impress the letters.
Step 1 - take a coin Step 2 - put glue on coin Step 3 - take 2nd coin and place on 1st coin Step 4 - wait for glue to dry Step 5 - Pry coins apart Step 6 - Voila
OK, I must be slow. I still don't see how that results in the letters that are raised. The letters in the reversed liberty seem to be raised as they would be if it were stamped with a die. Am I seeing this all wrong?
Definitely Glue. Sorry but not a Mint Error What you have does not occur at the Mint. No matter what you think it does not
I never thought it was a mint error either. But, what coin does the glue impression come from? I can't find any coins that the size of the letters coincides with.
I think I found the culprit. I just received an solicitation from a charity. Inside were a dime and a penny. Under each was glue to hold them on the paper. Look at the attached files and see how this may have worked to make the subject "error coin". The glue from the dime got transferred to the penny somehow.
Great! Sooner or later something happens and the light gets turned on. At least you're willing to learn. So many are not.