circular scrape and gouges moved the metal, that's all.
I assume mine is authentic. Got it from Lauren Benson of Davenport, Iowa about half a century ago!
I've got one, so they can't be rare!
Interestingly there are two varieties, one with the designer's name along the neck truncation - like yours, and another with the name near the rim.
Fat man dollar - weight is correct, but these are often counterfeited. [MEDIA]
https://www.forumancientcoins.com/numiswiki/view.asp?key=mint%20marks
[ATTACH]
Interesting lot seems to have a Tibet, India?, and some temple tokens. Valuable? I have no idea, but I'm sure that someone more knowledgeable than...
and a gallon of milk, loaf of bread and a dozen eggs:joyful:
MS-65
just weigh them - 2.5 gram zinc, 3.1 copper
106 years old! [ATTACH]
https://www.linkedin.com/pulse/guilty-penny-syndrome-brian-mckenzie [ATTACH]
I'll take a stab at it, although they're not in focus, and the glare covers parts. How about MS-63?
Impossible to grade from those pictures.
I wish that you'd have shown the obverses, any good dates, etc.? I've only found one Indian Head. It was a 1907 also, but in VF-XF!
IMO seller's photos are deceptive. That lamination runs through the "5".
BU - Beat Up
For what it's worth, I'd call it XF. That spot and the smaller one on the rim are rather unfortunate though.
Separate names with a comma.