Well, this thread sent me on my first-ever Wikipedia dive into the French monarchy...
Depends. Is it arranged to show an 1889 date on one end and a CC mintmark on the other, and listed on eBay? :rolleyes:
I was trying to decide whether I saw a hint of a mintmark peeking up at the bottom of that Buffalo, but I guess not. I'd still be tempted to give...
I'm with 1917 for this one. Looks like it's got the second hair curl. But I haven't = looked for 1916 examples for a while, so I'm rusty.
eBay has its problems, but this isn't one of them. This is a people problem. This guy could (and probably does) do the same thing on Craigslist,...
Meh, I'll wait for them to list their gold ones.
Except for the toxicity (similar to mercury or arsenic). And the price per ounce (significantly higher than silver). But hey, stick it in a smoke...
The only way it would make sense would be to do it effectively as a revaluation -- cent-like dollars, nickel-like $5, dime-like $10, quarter-like...
1949, or 1952?
Wow! Mint-marked Lincolns that old are nothing to sneeze at!
Yup. "What are you trying to hide when you carry that much cash?" Um, the outline of my wallet, which wouldn't need an inch-thick stack of 100s to...
If it doesn't say "TWENTY DOLLARS", it's not a St. Gaudens double eagle. Lots of people make bullion or "decorative" rounds based on popular coin...
Oh heck no. Maybe he can't see marks on a PROOF surface after RUBBING IT WITH AN ERASER, but I'm thinking that says less about his technique and...
Now, now. When I was a little kid, it was "shine up your pennies with a pencil eraser". And before that, it was "be sure to polish your coins...
Clipped and broadstruck?!!?
Oooooh. There can't have been that many Ike planchets sent back in time to the 1800s to fall into the presses. Good find!
I don't think the royals have ever been in the habit of airing their "human frailties" in detail.
If it had been incomplete when struck, we'd see weakness on the rim opposite the missing piece. We also wouldn't see that ridge along the border...
I'd take extra silver dollars and ask if I could change them for the Indian. Retailers always need change. :rolleyes:
I'd love to see it. As I keep saying, our current coin denominations are obsolete. But the fact is, change itself is becoming obsolete. For a...
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