Colonial Coins

Discussion in 'US Coins Forum' started by INDE1977, May 12, 2022.

  1. CoinTalkJim

    CoinTalkJim Active Member

    Your Fugio is nicer than mine. My picture do not do it justice. FUGIOCOPPER1787FRONT (2).jpg FUGIOCOPPER1787BACK.jpg
     
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  3. Publius2

    Publius2 Well-Known Member

    I'm not collecting any particular pre-Federal or Colonial series at the moment but rather adding these coins to my US Type Set. But I also don't buy a PF or COL until I've bought enough reference materials to help me understand what I'm doing. Anyway, here's some selections of PF and COL. I won't include Fugio since it's now considered an authorized US issue. Also not included is my Spanish silver.

    The uncut pair of 1788 $5/$7 Continental Currency really grabbed me at a show. I didn't haggle with the dealer, just paid his ask, which was not unreasonable.

    Last night I bid on a Mass half cent in the EAC Auction but lost. Also lost on a Talbot, Allum & Lee token. One of the highlights I watched was someone going to a $28,000 hammer of a 1795 Jefferson Head S-80 large cent, raw, sharpness VF20, EAC Net VG8.

    Obv-tile.jpg Obv-Lightened-side.jpg Obv Lightened-side.jpg DSC_1129.jpg DSC_1127.jpg 1786 NJ Obv-side.jpg Seller-Crop-Obverse-side.jpg
     
  4. Collecting Nut

    Collecting Nut Borderline Hoarder

    A nice Kentucky Token.
    EA18D671-5579-4F58-9B62-5F76DCE924F0.jpeg 27345BCC-E13E-4497-9B30-F9909548A627.jpeg
     
  5. Jack D. Young

    Jack D. Young Well-Known Member

    Showed this one around at the EAC St. Louis Convention last week; created a lot of interest:

    on-line cert.jpg
     
  6. INDE1977

    INDE1977 Well-Known Member

     
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  7. jfreakofkorn

    jfreakofkorn Well-Known Member

    Some really nice examples shown on this thread . . .
     
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  8. l.cutler

    l.cutler Member

    A baby head is high on my want list, wow that one is amazing!
     
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  9. Jack D. Young

    Jack D. Young Well-Known Member

    My pre-slab images:

    combo.jpg
     
  10. mbogoman

    mbogoman Active Member

    "Ghost" Oak Tree shilling, PCGS VF20 and an Oak Tree Two Pence, PCGS VF30
    1652 Oak Tree Shilling Ghost VF20 combined.jpg 1662 Oak Tree Twopence VF30 combined.jpg
     
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  11. ksparrow

    ksparrow Coin Hoarder Supporter

    So Jack, this Vt. Baby Head appeared in in an old thread (2018) onthe CU forums, started by Insider, about electrotypes. https://forums.collectors.com/discu...-detailed-the-deceptive-old-electrotypes-were
    So, ummm, is this an electrotype that NGC slabbed as a genuine AU58? Or am I simply confused, which has been known to happen, on occasion. (?)
     
  12. Publius2

    Publius2 Well-Known Member

    I presume it's called a "ghost" because of the almost non-existent image of the tree?
     
  13. mbogoman

    mbogoman Active Member

    Yes, exactly.
     
  14. Jack D. Young

    Jack D. Young Well-Known Member

    I purchased the Baby Head as an electro a few years ago; in that time I could NOT find an actual source coin for it, and XRF and weight do not support it as an electro either. Several of my Colonial experts began questioning if it wasn't genuine and I sent it to NGC where it slabbed. I continue to review it with experts but consensus so far is it is good...
     
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  15. ksparrow

    ksparrow Coin Hoarder Supporter

    Wow! That makes it ?highest graded? Amazing coin!
     
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  16. Jack D. Young

    Jack D. Young Well-Known Member

    Actually highest TPG graded; only 1 MS coin is the raw Bennington Example.
     
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  17. Tamaracian

    Tamaracian 12+ Yr Member--Supporter

    @Collecting Nut "To Counterfeit is DEATH"; I think they meant it back then--not so much nowadays with all the counterfeit coins and other items being produced!
     
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  18. Collecting Nut

    Collecting Nut Borderline Hoarder

    But we’d have a lot less counterfeiting if it was true today.
     
  19. johnmilton

    johnmilton Well-Known Member

    It may have said that “counterfeiting is death,” but I think that must have applied to paper money. Given the number of counterfeit coins that were made during that era, the enforcement must have been quite lax.

    A prime example was the Machen Mills Company which made real coins during the day and counterfeit pieces at night.m
     
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  20. Tamaracian

    Tamaracian 12+ Yr Member--Supporter

    @johnmilton yes I agree that there were contemporary counterfeits made, both coinage and script, however, there was no "official" federally-issued paper money until 1862, only script, and local or state bank issued notes.

    As for coins, there was the recently designated "first official coin", the Fugio Cent of 1787, but that was not promoted by congress as such and so it was the 1792 Half Disme that was generally considered the first official coinage of the U.S. and therefore, the following paragraph would not have applied to federal coinage, but may have applied to Colonial Coinage and foreign circulating coins within the colonies (which were legal tender until 1857).

    It should be noted that Congress desired to severely punish anyone that would attempt to defraud, this is evident via the following citation from the "First Congress Session II Chapters 8, 9 Section 14" and this Statute remains in force to this day (various authors have referenced this in their publications), but has never been enforced by penalty of death:

    "SEC. 14. And be it [further] enacted, That if any person or persons shall falsely make, alter, forge or counterfeit, or cause or procure to be falsely made, altered, forged, or counterfeited, or willingly act or assist in the false making, altering, forging or counterfeiting any certificate, indent, or other public security of the United States, or shall utter, put off, or offer, or cause to be uttered, put off, or offered in payment or for sale any such false, forged, altered or counterfeited certificate, indent or other public security, with intention to defraud any person, knowing the same to be false, -altered, forged or counterfeited, and shall be thereof convicted, every such person shall suffer death.(6)"

     
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  21. Mainebill

    Mainebill Bethany Danielle

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