Some nice wheat cents but nothing worth getting graded. The 1914 is the only one that might be worth more than a dollar, and that one is not...
The dealer may give you an opinion, but it would have to go to PCGS to get their attribution service. The PCGS dealer could send it to them for...
The dime is just damaged, it took a nasty hit.
No it is just damaged. Looks like glue or some other foreign substance, and another coin was pressed into it.
No way that happened at the mint, looks like somebody took a torch to it.
As I read the article it pretty well explains the difference between doubled dies and mechanical doubling. It does also explain that a doubled...
There are a multitude of different dates and mint marks that are plated. Spend a little time searching on this forum, and you will see many...
I had some of the same thoughts, but am not that familiar with trade dollars. I have been watching the thread to see what everyone else thought...
Most likely heat damage, may have been in a fire.
I only see a normal cent with some damage to the plating. What in particular are you looking at?
Not that there was any doubt to begin with, but your edge pictures are further proof that the coin was cut down. A quarter struck on a smaller...
Unless very high grade or they have errors, then they are worth 25 cents. Is there something special about them?
Just cut down, plain and simple.
It's a little rough, probably good details, some scratches and maybe some environmental damage, but I would definitely hang onto it.
You can even see where some of the plating is chipping off the edge.
No, not seeing it. Just a damaged quarter.
Nope, just environmental damage.
Don't forget, clad dimes have a copper core which is visible on the edge as a band of copper all the way around. The area you scraped is most...
Welcome to the forum. Your dime has suffered environmental damage, it has spent time in the ground. They show up here frequently.
I guess the question would be what exactly was the coin. Possibly just a US 5 dollar gold piece? The only actual Confederate coins were five...
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