VickySilver Posted February 22, 2011 Posted February 22, 2011 I have seen this coin, the 1854 half sovereign referred to by Marsh who seems to not clearly state that he had seen one. I have not, nor has anybody I know. It has been variously listed in Coincraft many years ago, and even in Spink. I wonder if anybody can confirm seeing one, or even go one better by posting a picture of it? Quote
Peckris Posted February 22, 2011 Posted February 22, 2011 I have seen this coin, the 1854 half sovereign referred to by Marsh who seems to not clearly state that he had seen one. I have not, nor has anybody I know. It has been variously listed in Coincraft many years ago, and even in Spink. I wonder if anybody can confirm seeing one, or even go one better by posting a picture of it?I'm trying to understand your message - you say you've seen one, then you say you haven't! Quote
VickySilver Posted February 22, 2011 Author Posted February 22, 2011 (edited) I have not seen this coin, and it is "legendary" in my book. Please post a picture or cite a reference if you have it.Rob P???? PS Sorry, a typo as I wrote this at work . NOT seen is what I meant. Edited February 22, 2011 by VickySilver Quote
Peckris Posted February 22, 2011 Posted February 22, 2011 I have not seen this coin, and it is "legendary" in my book. Please post a picture or cite a reference if you have it.Rob P????No no, I definitely haven't! I was just puzzled by your conflicting message. Quote
HistoryTreasures Posted February 23, 2011 Posted February 23, 2011 I have it, but I am keeping it secret in my Swiss bank account NOT! Quote
VickySilver Posted February 23, 2011 Author Posted February 23, 2011 Might want to see what it brings at auction in this market! [Or sell it to me!]Seriously, I have seen these in several old catalogues listed in Fine condition but nobody has been able to confirm existence of this coin in recent times. I do find it interesting that Marsh, who seems to not have actually seen specimen, lists it without stating "reported, not confirmed". Quote
SionGilbey Posted February 24, 2011 Posted February 24, 2011 There were over 1 million minted but as we know this doesn't mean that over 1 million exist. But statistically there must be one somewhere... I think... Quote
Rob Posted February 25, 2011 Posted February 25, 2011 (edited) I have not seen this coin, and it is "legendary" in my book. Please post a picture or cite a reference if you have it.Rob P???? PS Sorry, a typo as I wrote this at work . NOT seen is what I meant.I've no idea at present as I haven't checked out 1/2 sovs, but will keep an eye open for a reference. They aren't a commonly collected denomination to any depth, so any occurence is likely to be random which is unhelpful when searching catalogues. It's likely to be a Captain Oates moment. Edited February 25, 2011 by Rob Quote
VickySilver Posted February 25, 2011 Author Posted February 25, 2011 (edited) Rob, I am thinking that if there is such a beast that it mustn't have been for sale in the last ten years or so and would be before that. According to the few listings I have seen this coin is likely, if it exists to be in F condition. Wonder if the mintage for the year could have been sent to some far off colony and most subsequently melted or meeting some such ugly fate.... Something like the die 6 1878 Dritanniar sixpences sent to Cyprus. BTW, has anybody ever seen one of these better than EF (the 6d that is)? Edited February 25, 2011 by VickySilver Quote
ski Posted February 25, 2011 Posted February 25, 2011 (edited) Something like the die 6 1878 Dritanniar sixpences sent to Cyprus. BTW, has anybody ever seen one of these better than EF (the 6d that is)?ive only seen vf Edited February 25, 2011 by ski Quote
VickySilver Posted February 26, 2011 Author Posted February 26, 2011 Spink had one of the Dritanniars for sale 6 or so months ago that I believe is in a PCGS holder 64 - that is incredible as mine is the usual vf or so like all others I have seen. Doubt the Cypriots took much care with those that came their way, or possibly that is only a rumour?? Quote
VickySilver Posted August 12, 2013 Author Posted August 12, 2013 Just thought I would resurrect this thread. I DO like this denomination, but have had absolutely no success in confirming the 1854 & am inclined to think it does not exist after conversations with many milled predecimal experts.Interesting that the 1862 half sov evidently went unnoticed until 1979...Kind of like some of the new species that show up now and then in the natural world (oh please don't mention the "Megalodon" that sank the ship off South Africa in April of this year!). Quote
numismatist Posted August 13, 2013 Posted August 13, 2013 I DID have a 1878 DRITANNIAR Sixpence that was BU Gem and acceptable assuch by John Duggan. That was in the 1970's . I've forgotten how much he paidbut I drove it 100 plus miles and back to take to to him so it must have been alot of money even back then . Quote
VickySilver Posted August 13, 2013 Author Posted August 13, 2013 Wonder if that was the Spink coin? Quote
Mr T Posted July 31, 2015 Posted July 31, 2015 Sorry to drag this up without a concrete answer but it seems there have been a few major sovereign collections sell in the last few years - I don't suppose any of them had corresponding half sovereign collections?Have you tried asking the Royal Mint or British Museum if they have any examples too? Not sure whether either collection is complete enough for their answer to give any closure but it can't hurt to ask. Quote
azda Posted July 31, 2015 Posted July 31, 2015 According to the Michael Marsh book on half sovs, there was 1.124,144 1854s minted and is R6 rated, yet an 1850 has a mintage of only 179,595 and is rated As R2, so i don't know how that works in the grand Scheme of things, normally a higher mintage would have a lower rarity rating Quote
Rob Posted July 31, 2015 Posted July 31, 2015 Must mean they were dated 1853 even though struck a year later Quote
Rob Posted July 31, 2015 Posted July 31, 2015 Sorry to drag this up without a concrete answer but it seems there have been a few major sovereign collections sell in the last few years - I don't suppose any of them had corresponding half sovereign collections?Have you tried asking the Royal Mint or British Museum if they have any examples too? Not sure whether either collection is complete enough for their answer to give any closure but it can't hurt to ask.The mint almost certainly doesn't have one as there is only an 1853 listed in Hocking. Searching the BM site is a bit more problematic, so maybe someone else can help here as I can't seem to search for items reproducibly. Quote
azda Posted July 31, 2015 Posted July 31, 2015 (edited) Must mean they were dated 1853 even though struck a year laterNot sure about that Rob As he has 1853 with a mintage of 2.708,796 and N rated Edited July 31, 2015 by azda Quote
Rob Posted July 31, 2015 Posted July 31, 2015 Must mean they were dated 1853 even though struck a year laterNot sure about that Rob As he has 1853 with a mintage of 2.708,796 and N ratedMaybe it's a misprunt then. An extra 1 by mistake?The thing is, the rarity reflects the numbers of each date noted, not the mintage. By the time you get to N rarity it encompasses a fairly wide range of possibilities. This is a perennial problem with currency pieces. Patterns are straightforward as the survivors are likely to closely reflect the original mintage, but currency could be struck using old dies. Quote
Paulus Posted July 31, 2015 Posted July 31, 2015 As I understand it, there is no way to know how many were minted that were actually dated 1854 (or any other date)? Quote
azda Posted July 31, 2015 Posted July 31, 2015 (edited) Its also interesting that the 1848/7 is also an R6 but mintage unknown. Paul, how would Marsh get the mintage figures for the coins if this were the case? He would have to approach the RM for mintage figures for each year Edited July 31, 2015 by azda Quote
Rob Posted July 31, 2015 Posted July 31, 2015 Its also interesting that the 1848/7 is also an R6 but mintage unknown. Paul, how would Marsh get the mintage figures for the coins if this were the case? He would have to approach the RM for mintage figures for each yearYes, but it wouldn't tell you what dates were on the dies. Mintage will just be a production figure. Same goes for 1947 brass threepences. In the latter case, there are none, so must have used 1946 (or earlier) dies. Quote
azda Posted July 31, 2015 Posted July 31, 2015 This is true Rob, but with the 1854 surely with well over 1 million minted as suggested than there must have been a percentage minted for the date, so they must be out there somewhere Quote
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