Accumulator Posted December 23, 2013 Posted December 23, 2013 I know this has been discussed before but, as far as I can tell from searching, never had it's own 'unlisted varieties' thread. Strictly it's not unlisted as David includes some details in his excellent book, though only two very small photos. I've been going through quite a few 1904 pennies and there appears to be a very definite rotation of the last '4' in 1904. Here's a selection of what I've found: Quote
Coinery Posted December 23, 2013 Posted December 23, 2013 Without diving into the books, are all 4 of these different? They look it! Quote
Peter Posted December 24, 2013 Posted December 24, 2013 We've had an unlisted variety sticky before....this is why CCGB is on the ball.Now 1,2 & 3 are between dots and 4 is to dot.The jury is out at Peter mansions. Quote
Peckris Posted December 24, 2013 Posted December 24, 2013 Can't say these float my boat, UNLESS there are other differences too? I suspect though, it's just the punching of the final digit. I remember in the late 60s in Coin Monthly when Ron Stafford - or one of his ilk - tried to sell us on a plethora of 1907 varieties, all concerning the length and pointing of the 7. "Where are they now"? Quote
Accumulator Posted December 24, 2013 Author Posted December 24, 2013 (edited) We've had an unlisted variety sticky before....this is why CCGB is on the ball.Now 1,2 & 3 are between dots and 4 is to dot.The jury is out at Peter mansions.Can't say these float my boat, UNLESS there are other differences too? I suspect though, it's just the punching of the final digit. I remember in the late 60s in Coin Monthly when Ron Stafford - or one of his ilk - tried to sell us on a plethora of 1907 varieties, all concerning the length and pointing of the 7. "Where are they now"?I do generally agree with you. Apart from the 'normal' (top in my photo) variety, I might just include a 'last 4 points to tooth' in the collection, though, as it's so different. I know several others have indicated the same in previous postings.Interesting about the 60s Coin Monthly info. I have a few ED VII pennies collected during that period with notes like 'short nines', 'plume flaw', 'closed 9', 'plume joined to back of helmet', 'large plume flaw' etc. I can barely (and it could even be my imagination) make out any difference between them. Someone has spent an awful lot of time with a loupe and, very possibly, a Coin Monthly article to come up with these minuscule differences! Edited December 24, 2013 by Accumulator Quote
azda Posted December 24, 2013 Posted December 24, 2013 The last one is definately quite distinct compared to the other 3 Quote
RLC35 Posted December 24, 2013 Posted December 24, 2013 The last one is definately quite distinct compared to the other 3I just looked thru 10 1904 Pennies, and didn't find any with the 4 over the tooth! I would assume it is the most difficult to find. Quote
Accumulator Posted December 24, 2013 Author Posted December 24, 2013 The last one is definately quite distinct compared to the other 3I just looked thru 10 1904 Pennies, and didn't find any with the 4 over the tooth! I would assume it is the most difficult to find.Yes Bob, they're unbelievably difficult to find and worth $15,995! Or the narrow date 1877 on your website, of course Quote
RLC35 Posted December 24, 2013 Posted December 24, 2013 The last one is definately quite distinct compared to the other 3I just looked thru 10 1904 Pennies, and didn't find any with the 4 over the tooth! I would assume it is the most difficult to find.Yes Bob, they're unbelievably difficult to find and worth $15,995! Or the narrow date 1877 on your website, of course WOW!!!!!!! I have got to start paying more attention. It looks like David is going to have a additional 1904 for his book's next printing! Does anyone you know actually have one of these? Quote
Peckris Posted December 25, 2013 Posted December 25, 2013 The last one is definately quite distinct compared to the other 3I just looked thru 10 1904 Pennies, and didn't find any with the 4 over the tooth! I would assume it is the most difficult to find.Yes Bob, they're unbelievably difficult to find and worth $15,995! Or the narrow date 1877 on your website, of course WOW!!!!!!! I have got to start paying more attention. It looks like David is going to have a additional 1904 for his book's next printing! Does anyone you know actually have one of these?I thought the $15,995 remark was simply jocularity ... it's serious?? Or perhaps you missed some British-type irony .. Quote
Accumulator Posted December 25, 2013 Author Posted December 25, 2013 Definitely good old British irony The '4 to tooth' is certainly rarer though. Quote
Gary D Posted January 2, 2014 Posted January 2, 2014 The last one is definately quite distinct compared to the other 3I just looked thru 10 1904 Pennies, and didn't find any with the 4 over the tooth! I would assume it is the most difficult to find.Yes Bob, they're unbelievably difficult to find and worth $15,995! Or the narrow date 1877 on your website, of course WOW!!!!!!! I have got to start paying more attention. It looks like David is going to have a additional 1904 for his book's next printing! Does anyone you know actually have one of these?They are out there, I had a ropy one for a while until I sold it on ebay after getting a much better example. It didn't cause much interest. Quote
Recommended Posts
Join the conversation
You can post now and register later. If you have an account, sign in now to post with your account.