1903-S Morgan

Discussion in 'Coin Chat' started by Mark1971, Jul 20, 2025 at 3:39 PM.

  1. Mark1971

    Mark1971 Well-Known Member

    I won this piece for $60 in a recent auction. I found $45 lying on the ground in a parking lot and then got a notification this auction was closing soon. High bid was $55, so I went in at a $70 max just to take a shot. Fully expected to not win. From these pics, not mine, looks like it could be EF. Red book price for EF and lower grades is quite a bit higher than $60.

    IMG_1712.jpeg IMG_1713.jpeg
     
    dwhiz, -jeffB and Mr. Numismatist like this.
  2. Avatar

    Guest User Guest



    to hide this ad.
  3. -jeffB

    -jeffB Greshams LEO Supporter

    Nice snag! I'd say the only way you could lose is if it turns out to be fake, and I don't see any of the obvious signs in these photos.
     
    Mark1971 likes this.
  4. Mark1971

    Mark1971 Well-Known Member

    Yeah, I didn’t see anything that would have stood out as ‘fake’ to me, but I am by no means an expert in that regard.
     
  5. physics-fan3.14

    physics-fan3.14 You got any more of them.... prooflikes?

    Yeah, judging by the pictures I'd rate it a solid EF. I really don't see anything that screams counterfeit - if that's a fake, it is a *really* good one. The black spot above her ear and eyebrow looks like it should be able to come off easily enough (try some acetone). I'm concerned about the scrape on her cheek, but it isn't bad enough for details.

    Judging by Ebay past sales, assuming it isn't counterfeit, that's a $400 coin all day long.
     
    Mark1971 likes this.
  6. Mark1971

    Mark1971 Well-Known Member

    I wasn’t too concerned about that scrape or the black spots. I’ll take some better pics before and after an acetone bath and we’ll see how it looks.

    Thanks for your opinions!
     
  7. 7Jags

    7Jags Well-Known Member

    I might be tempted to conserve that tarry bit off...
     
  8. Mark1971

    Mark1971 Well-Known Member

    Can you expand on that thought?
     
  9. 7Jags

    7Jags Well-Known Member

    Yes, I would try soap and water first with NO friction (rubbing) first and then acetone. Third, I would try rubbing alcohol (with that would heat it up and then soak the coin in and then GENTLY tamp the surface with Q-tip. More is possible but do these first.
    But don't do any of this if you are not comfortable.
     
Draft saved Draft deleted

Share This Page