Yeah I know. I was just saying that it has an upset rim. How deep was it? It looks like it was underground for a very long time.
I agree with this. The piece could be anything especially if this has been found on the east coast. Does look old though.
My bet is that it is a token of some kind. No way it is ancient. It has a rim consistent with an upsetting mill.
Total longshot but $54,500. I have no clue when dealing with big boy coins:greedy:
Huh. Interesting. Maybe I am a little biased towards doing a walking half set and dont want the demand to go up lol
IMO the 1916 D is more popular and more collectors would rather that than the 1921 D half. I think the 16 D is higher priced in lower grades...
Also possibly both coins cleaned and stored in the same environment could account for the same surfaces.
Looks legit. Has the common die crack on the neck. Probably messed with some how.
PF66BN
I'll go 64 and possibly RB. I like it.
66
Ah screw it, color bump to 65 BN
I have only ever kept one MAD. And I did find it. [ATTACH]
I will be camping up by Mount Rushmore in about 2 weeks. My Fiancée has never been. Hopefully it's warmer by then.
Kind of looks like a struck on split planchet My example [ATTACH] [ATTACH]
The mint sucks. Combine that with people wanting to afford gas, groceries... baby formula. The wants tend to take a back seat more heavily when...
Well, I thought of that as well. I do own a struck on fragment cent (also a brockage). In my mind a fragment, based on my example below, is more...
Too bad too. Probably why it has stayed in that slab this whole time.
Uh, it has a gold holographic sticker that says Numismatic Guaranty Company of America.
I don't ignore you. It technically could be called off center since I doubt it sat in the collar perfectly center. I however do not know what to...
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