Double sided Walking Liberty.

Discussion in 'US Coins Forum' started by totherescue20, Jun 25, 2008.

  1. totherescue20

    totherescue20 New Member

    I have in my possession a 1942 Walking Liberty. Oh, i should first say that i know almost nothing about U.S. coins, but would love to. So as i was saying, i have a 1942 walking liberty with what appears to be a big error. walking liberty is on both sides. Both sides are identical. I'm sorry if im doing a bad job explaining this. I just hope it wasn't a common mistake for 1942. I'm trying to take some good pictures of it if anyone has any tips for doing that im all ears.
     
  2. Avatar

    Guest User Guest



    to hide this ad.
  3. hontonai

    hontonai Registered Contrarian

    I hate to burst your bubble, but you have a manufactured item, known as a "Magician's Coin", worth a couple of bucks at the outside.
     
  4. bqcoins

    bqcoins Olympic Figure Skating Scoring System Expert

    look for a seam on the side where the two halves are most likely glued together
     
  5. hontonai

    hontonai Registered Contrarian

    Or even more likely a hairline just inside the rim on one side where one coin was hollowed out and a second one was milled down to fit inside.
     
  6. rhoggman

    rhoggman New Member

    The coin is most likely 99.99999% as stated by previous posts. In the remote posibilty that the coin is genuine you are sitting on a small gold-mine.

    It is always fun to think about what kind of money something like that could bring if it were real. Maybe a couple hundred thousand? Enjoy the thought because it is likely more valuable than reality in this case.
     
  7. Treashunt

    Treashunt The Other Frank


    Or a large gold mine.

    .000001% is too high a chance.
     
  8. Conder101

    Conder101 Numismatist

    Yeah, with 72,769,800 half dollars made that year there would be 73 of them floating around and they would probably have been reported long before now. :)
     
  9. rhoggman

    rhoggman New Member

    I knew flunking math was going to come back to haunt me one day.
     
  10. totherescue20

    totherescue20 New Member

    does anyone have pictures that give examples of these cracks where the coin was cut in half. Cause im looking at it and i just do see anything like that. who knows.
     
  11. walterallen

    walterallen Coin Collector

    The seam to the halves could be in different places, but I assure you it is there. Obverse dies are made to fit only the hammer side of the press. When you see a double sided coin you see a "trick" coin for sure. Silver is at 10X face and more. Keep it its neat!

    Keep on Collecting!!!

    Allen
     
  12. rzage

    rzage What Goes Around Comes Around .

    1 word , impossible = no chance in a million . Sorry .
    rzage
     
  13. Magman

    Magman U.S. Money Collector

    or is it?
     
  14. GDJMSP

    GDJMSP Numismatist Moderator

    It's not impossible, but it's certainly highly improbable. There are 3 or 4 doubled headed/tailed US coins that I know to exist. That's it, out of hundreds of billions of coins that have been minted. There are quite a few more among the coins of other nations, but we are talking US.
     
  15. rzage

    rzage What Goes Around Comes Around .

    Wrong Again

    I'll eat GDs hat . my bad .
    rzage:eek::confused::kewl::hail:
     
  16. deadmunny

    deadmunny Member

Draft saved Draft deleted

Share This Page