Counterstamped Coins

Discussion in 'US Coins Forum' started by Waespym, Feb 19, 2015.

  1. Waespym

    Waespym New Member

    Hi,

    I came across to U.S. coins and I believe they have been counterstamped. I know for sure that one of them is a large cent and the other has a face with the liberty crown and a tiny portion of a wreath on the back. They're both about 30-32mm in diameter. Is there any significance of what's stamped into the coins?

    Coin 1:
    [​IMG] [​IMG] [​IMG] [​IMG]

    Coin 2:
    [​IMG] [​IMG]
     
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  3. deacon2828

    deacon2828 Active Member

    J . Hicks is a known counterstamp on a 1831 large Cent Brunk-( h-548 ). Cast steel is a warrant stamp to show something is real, that is what I think !
     
    EagleEyez likes this.
  4. foreverEBG

    foreverEBG Member

    from the experience ive had with counterstamps ive learned that the more desireable counterstamps are the ones that has more than someone's initials, so your
    "J. Hicks-Cast Steel" holds more value than the one with "J.E.M" because it required more cost for the merchant to produce a single punch with a phrase or advertisment with uniformly aligned letters than individual punches with unaligned letters as seen on your second set of pictures. that J hicks coin is pretty cool and the fact that its a known merchant enhaces its provonance.
     
    EagleEyez likes this.
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