Holding History, you aren't by chance using the Whitman Encyclopedia of Colonial and Early American coins are you? The Maris 29 photo in the book...
It appears to be a counterfeit to me. The bumpy gravelly surfaces have the look of a cast fake.
Looks like a 1942?
I am pretty sure it is glue and other coins were pressed into the glue.
Yup, 33's are the worst. I think there are something like 50 different obverses and with reverse combinations close to 100.
Sorry, just not enough detail in the photo for me. It may be one of the obverse 31 or 33 varieties, but that wouldn't narrow it down much I...
Not even close to a Muttonhead, the one in the link posted. The photos aren't the best to show the details needed to attribute it, but if no one...
Normal cents worth one cent each.
Your nickel is a 2004, just really beat up.
Yup, regular Philadelphia cent worth, 1 cent.
Might be a plating blister or a die chip, can't really say without pictures.
It is absolutely positively fake. Not a chance of it being genuine.
I watched your video and you can clearly see that the plating is wearing off the edge. This coin is obviously plated, no other answer. Whether...
Absolutely just a normal Philadelphia coin worth a dollar as stated.
It is your money, send it in.
No, the genuine pieces were dated 1861 and very few were produced. Yours is a common souvenir type piece.
There are a lot of plated cents out there, not sure why.
It is plated. There are spots along the rim where the plating is chipped off showing the copper underneath.
I'll give it a try, thanks!
That is as fake as fake can be, no question.
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