• 1806 Flowing Half Dollar Blog Entry

    From Popping Mad@21:1/5 to Michael Byrne on Mon Feb 21 09:19:33 2022
    To: Longstrider06@gmail.com (Longstrider06@gmail.com)
    To: hangout@nylxs.com (Hangout)
    To: pgentzler@money.org (Pete Gentzler)
    To: kkiick@money.org (Kim Kiick)

    ***note this took me about 4 hours to write... or longer.


    http://www.mrbrklyn.com/flowinghair_1806.html



    The 1806 or more properly, the 1805/6 coinage of US half dollars ran
    into several mintage problems, some of them errors and some of them just
    issues of the mint economizing its production. To a degree, these
    various die examples were just sloppiness on the part of the mint. Its a
    field day for Bust collectors with over 186,000 coins minted and no less
    than 23 varieties listed in Walter Breems text. I'm am sure there are
    more today.

    1806 Half Dollar Bust with Heraldic Eagle and Shield

    When acquiring or collecting these coins, it is most helpful to have an
    expert in the field as a guild and mentor, and in my case I have a
    wonderful relationship with David Kahn, one of the premier Bust Half
    experts in the world. Aside from getting a great flowing hair bust in
    VF30, this coin has outstanding providence, which makes it that much
    more desirable in my mind. This coin came from the Meyer Collection and
    is an Overton 125 (Rarity 5) die pair. It has pointed number '6' in
    1806, and the stems go through the reverse eagles claw. It is not easy
    to explain this without a photograph. Fortunately we have a description
    on USA Coin Book If this link dies, as my websites tend to outlive much
    of the internet, I have a PDF copy in my coins directory.

    The Overton 125 variety is harder to describe. There is a detailed
    discussion of the variety at The Early Half Dollars Information Site. It describes the variety as

    Variety Attribution: Obverse-Stars are sharp pointed and close to
    milling. Date is 8 1/2 mm. and large, with 6 higher than 180. 1 close to
    curl. Spike like segment between star 7 and L, a similar one between L
    and I is closer to I. Some specimens begin to show a die crack at base
    of 180 and like many of these early halves may or may not show various
    clash marks. O-125: Reverse-5 berries all with stems, the two center
    ones touch leaves above. Point of leaf close under right base of I. Star
    point attached to beak just above point of same. A2 clear of both
    feathers and M. A fine die crack from milling joins right side of O in
    OF with small lump and extends through clouds into stars.

    This is the kind of minute detail that bust experts talk about, and it
    is why one really needs an expert on your side when you are in the
    market for these coins. I, myself, am not variety crazy, but the Bust
    Half groupies dominate this market.

    What I do have fascination with, however, is providence. Knowing the
    lineage of a coin goes a long way to assuring that the coin has never
    been stolen. This is a Meyer collection coin. According to David Kahn,
    Charlton "Swampy" Meyer was one of the largest Bust collectors of all
    time with a completed 450 coin capped bust Overton variety set. He also
    had other complete sets. Formally known as Charlton "Swampy" Meyer Jr,
    and he seemed have been closely associated with the dealer Sheridan
    Downey, who is still dealing coins today (Feb 2022).

    Meyer probably got the moniker of "Swampy" because he lived most of his
    life in Louisiana. Another of the important Jewish coin collectors, he
    was born on January 6, 1931 and died September 11, 2006, so his life
    over laps mine. He was associated with the Louisiana Paper company and
    A. G. Edwards a stock broker and analyst. He contributed numismatic
    object to the Houston Holocaust museum which had been extensively
    written about (Questionable issue : currency of the Holocaust : the
    Charlton E. Meyer Jr. and Gloria B. Meyer Collection of the Holocaust
    Museum Houston / by Steven Feller ; edited by Stephen T. Johnson ; with
    major contributions from Lisa Moellering and Ellen Trachtenberg.). So he
    had a full life aside from his perchance to collect great coins, one of
    which ended up in my collection.
    Flowing Hair 1806 O125 R5 Obverse
    Flowing Hair 1806 O125 R5 Reverse

    This coin has been particularly hard to photograph and even harder to
    photo edit. The purpose of photo editing is to bring out the true look
    of a coin, not to improve it. I tend to get the coins details out of the images, but in this case the coin has an unusual luster (unusual for a
    VF30 and the reason I purchased this coin). The shield's horizontal
    strips really can show it off when looked at on an angle. And the fields
    have real toning. It has a slight peach toning to the fields, and it is
    almost like the coin was struck proof like, and then circulated but
    retaining the luster.

    Making it hard is that the imaging technology is going through a transformation. The images from the camera are coming out with floating
    point 32 bit color, but the viewing and editing software outside of the
    Gimp doesn't tranlation 32 floating point bits colors well at all,
    especially with the PNG format. I am hoping that the software will all
    catch up so I can leverage the full image quality. This problem is true
    for all my photographs going forward. I'll probablyget more images up of
    this coin in the near future and maybe a video. It has become one of my favorite coins.

    It is worth noting that the Heraldic Eagle is the Seal of the United
    States and the design has the phrase "E Pluribus Unum" which on this
    coin is either no struck well, or perhaps lost to circulation. But the
    arrows and the branches are backwards, with the arrows on the left when
    they should be in the right claw. And there was an interesting
    discussion on this coin about the nature of the "matted toning",
    especially below the date. While this is commonly thought of as being an indication of artifical toning, or dipping or even counterfeiting, on
    these coins, this toning is common. Overall, it is a really lovely coin, especially in the hand.


    https://www.davidkahnrarecoins.com/
    https://www.davidkahnrarecoins.com/ https://www.usacoinbook.com/coins/2472/half-dollars/draped-bust/1806-P/pointed-6-stem-through-claw/

    http://maibockaddict.com/1806-o-125-r5-draped-bust-half-dollar.shtml
    --
    So many immigrant groups have swept through our town
    that Brooklyn, like Atlantis, reaches mythological
    proportions in the mind of the world - RI Safir 1998
    http://www.mrbrklyn.com
    DRM is THEFT - We are the STAKEHOLDERS - RI Safir 2002

    http://www.nylxs.com - Leadership Development in Free Software http://www.brooklyn-living.com

    Being so tracked is for FARM ANIMALS and extermination camps,
    but incompatible with living as a free human being. -RI Safir 2013

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)