I found this yesterday....

bergie

Bronze Member
Aug 2, 2004
1,815
1,147
If you look carefully on the back, there are two sets of what look to be solder marks at the 3 and 9 clock positions that indicate this may have been made into a ring at one point and the "ring part" came off. Either that or it was attached to something else at those two points.
 

OP
OP
D

distelrath

Guest
Thank you everybody for your input. I was hoping I found a "once in a lifetime" treasure but hey it is still cool. I figured somebody used wooden tools to punch the face through but a press does seem to be more feasible. Hey... wasn't altering coinage illegal back then?

Thanks for the help!
Ryan
 

lab rat

Hero Member
May 21, 2003
947
141
Sunny Southern CA Coast
Detector(s) used
Minelab Sovereign
Primary Interest:
Beach & Shallow Water Hunting
Beautiful find-- Congratulations!

Altering coinage has never been illegal in the U.S. What is illegal is removing metal to diminish its value and then passing it as full value, or producing a facsimile and passing it as the real thing. But then, Congress did that when in 1965 they replaced silver coinage with the clad we use today.
 

Top Member Reactions

Users who are viewing this thread

Latest Discussions

Top