Yes, above and in front of. On the reverse in the spot that used to hold the mint mark. They seem to be directly opposite front to back.
This dime appears to have been struck with a lot of grease on both obverse and reverse. Or, is there another explanation for the...
This dime appears to have a strike through on both Obv and Rev exactly opposite each other.[ATTACH] [ATTACH]
"...as ul see on the front of the coin..." Sounds like solid coin dealer language.
The WLH's I like most are the ones I found in circulation. But, that was a long, long time ago. These? I like the second one above.
I only pay attention to eye appeal. Don't really care what it grades.
1919
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I have one slabbed coin - the 1916-D Mercury Dime. It is in the slab and in my safe. In the folder is just noted "slab". The complete collection...
I agree with Larry (heavymetal). However, it is your coin and it needs to look like you want it. Cleaning it will diminish value, so don't plan on...
Good information, thanks.
Welcome to CT. I have been collecting for 70 years. But, I am new at errors and varieties such as doubling. I collected and accumulated based upon...
United States of America is on the Reverse side.
Yes, I think both of them have finger prints.
When I first saw it I thought the finger print makes it AU at best.
I never thought of that. I think it is possible for the IHC, but, I don't see an impact point.
I can only guess that there were discontinuities in the metals. I have seen similar cases where even high grade steel could have segregation that...
I think that first one will fit in to the 'mutilated mint set' that @ewomack mentioned.
If we are having a contest don't tell @paddyman98 he finds interesting new specimens everyday.
As a young boy I put this one on a RR Track some time in the 1950's. Can it still qualify as "damaged" if it was premeditated? [ATTACH]
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