Low Ball 1882 CC- last coin of the year

Discussion in 'What's it Worth' started by kSigSteve, Dec 29, 2016.

  1. kSigSteve

    kSigSteve Active Member

    The year is almost over, this is my last coin purchase of the year. Was visiting family and hit the LCS on the way out of town. I was hoping to nab a lowball after the thread from @Omegaraptor

    Well, this one spoke to me.

    What do you think of the grade? For fun, what did I also purchase it at?
    IMG_1503.JPG IMG_1504.JPG
     
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  3. Omegaraptor

    Omegaraptor Gobrecht/Longacre Enthusiast

    It looks a bit cleaned to me but I don't think it matters at this grade.

    I'm thinking FR-02.

    I love this coin as well. It's a CC that actually experienced history instead of sitting in a bank vault for decades.
     
  4. Oldrdawg

    Oldrdawg Active Member

    I can't disagree with Omegaraptor's grade and agree the coin has seen some real history. Even with a willing suspension of disbelief, it's pretty hard to imagine that an MS65 Carson City dollar actually ever saw the bar top of a saloon, or even the inside of a farmer's pocket.
     
  5. SuperDave

    SuperDave Free the Cartwheels!

    Fun fact: At PCGS there are twice as many 1882-CC's in MS66 as all circulated grades combined. :)
     
    Cascade and Evan8 like this.
  6. Omegaraptor

    Omegaraptor Gobrecht/Longacre Enthusiast

    The 1884-CC Morgan Dollar is more common in all grades than the 1881-S.

    Bank vaults are a wonderful thing.
     
  7. SuperDave

    SuperDave Free the Cartwheels!

    PCGS has 56,279 1884-CC's in all grades total, and 101,000 1881-S's in MS64 alone. NGC numbers are similar.
     
  8. Omegaraptor

    Omegaraptor Gobrecht/Longacre Enthusiast

    It's actually coinfacts survival rates.

    Edit: Never mind, there are more 1881-S Morgans in all grades, but more 1884-CC in UNC.
     
  9. SuperDave

    SuperDave Free the Cartwheels!

    I can easily believe that. :)
     
  10. Mike Thorne

    Mike Thorne Well-Known Member

    It's just my opinion, but I think the whole low-ball craze is another ploy to get collectors to submit coins for grading that should have been sent to the refiners to be melted down. Suppose you put together a complete set of Morgans, sans 1895, in P1/F2 conditions. What have you got? It may put you at the top of the ranks of low-ball Morgans, but you've really got a bunch of coins that are UGLY and that only another low-ball collector will want to look at. I'm not trying to put down anybody who likes low-ball coins; they're just not my cup of tea.
     
  11. Cascade

    Cascade CAC Grader, Founding Member

    Wow. That's one hell of a conditional rarity. My gut says you should be able to pull around $150 for it.

    My guess is you paid around $60
     
  12. kSigSteve

    kSigSteve Active Member

    Thanks all for the comments.

    It was listed for $35 hanging around a bunch of shiny Morgan's mostly all xf-au. This lady had character, she stood out from the bunch, she had done her time and has a story or two to tell. I ended up getting $5 off due to being a frequent customer and the holidays and they knew I was visiting. So she came home with me for $30 and she won't leave my possession. She's my last coin of 2016 and labeled such. It's fun also to hold her.

    She doesn't want to be in plastic.
     
    Noah Finney likes this.
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