The prices sellers are selling at represents the true price of silver at any given time.
Of course blowing it up serves a purpose. That's why graders use magnifying glasses and I am just as blind as they are!
The reason it was counterfeited was because it is common. So easy to pass because who is going to give it a second glance. The crook has a dollar...
Looks like a struck-through under the U in trust with the fragment having fallen out and then another struck-through with the piece imbedded by...
OK- I blew it up. 60 or 61.
MS 62
PeacePeople.....HAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHA!
A dangerous counterfeit that would fool most collectors. I never buy 16 D's that are uncertified.
AU 55 weak strike but more importantly, no planchet flaws or corrosion. and the piece doesn't look harshly cleaned. Have owned several without...
Gorgeous coin!
After visiting friends in Dunedin I got caught up collecting the copper tokens from the gold rush years. Ended up with several hundred before I...
Of course it will go to $250 and past. The question most would like answered is when. I remember my great aunt telling me that bread will someday...
63. Late state dies and weak strike but still a nice coin!
Yes. Those are much more typical of the replica Cali gold fractionals.
I believe it's closer to 145 copper cents to the pound and that is only if they are unc.
Right now I have three blue, plastic 55 gal drums and the third is about three inches from the top. They mostly serve as conversation pieces in my...
Received it the other day! Thank you much. It's not like any of the "token" series and is quite a bit larger and better made. More modern, I would...
Dealer indications are $2402.41 this morning. If I was buying it, I would be around $2000.00 to $2100.00
The eagle's right leg is very often weakly struck with little detail. The planchets flaw in the reverse field doesn't involve the "A" in America...
I have an Indian $5 similar but it only got an AG 3. Darn.
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