Found 1819 on First Serious hunt in awhile

Don in SJ

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May 20, 2005
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I have been out on a couple of exploratory short hunts this month but today was the first time I went to a previous known spot and was hoping to kick off my 2007/8 hunting season with at least one coin.

After hunting for about one hour and only having one iron hook and one iron tie down ring to show for my morning hunt,(besides about 10 shotgun casings) I headed back towards where my mountain bike was parked. If figures, within about 15 feet of where I started about hour and half earlier I got the sweet sound of a larger copper, one of those no doubt about signals, despite the fact I was in the middle of what appeared to be a early 20th century dump site or camp area. There was a Bordon's square milk bottle almost on the surface and remains of burnt wood in the ground near where this sweet reading was.

I did take some photos of the site and the recovery, cleaning and finished product. I attributed the variety of this 1819 Coronet Large Cent , it is a Newcomb 1 variety, there are 10 known varieties for the year 1819.
It is a common variety however, it is a 1819 over 1818 variety. :)

This is my 5th 1819 Large Cent and I believe most of them are in decent shape.

The site was a former sawmill in the 1700's but in the early 1800's was occupied by the Iron Industry folks, about 1835-1840 the industry collapsed in Southern New Jersey and the area was abandoned for the most part.
The area I hunted was field area in the 1800's, but has been wooded since the early 1900's.

I am sure this site will be lost within the year to a development going in, I wish it had stayed in the hands of the local hunting club, but it is now slated for development and it will be gone forever, so I am trying to preserve as much history of the place as I can before the bulldozers arrive next year.

I cleaned the copper in one inch of peroxide, used wet q-tips (14 of them) to remove the stubborn grime and then dried under a lamp and coated with a light layer of wax.
Total cleaning time, attribution and photographing about 2+ hours.

Including today's find, here is a list of the coins recovered from this place over the past couple decades, my son and hunting partner has quite a few similar coins in addition to my finds here. It has been a very nice place to go to for many years.

1744 Spanish Two Reale
1781 Spanish Half Real
1787 New Jersey Colonial
1794 Liberty Cap Large Cent
1795 Liberty Cap Large Cent
1798 Draped Bust Large Cent
1798 Draped Bust Large Cent
1800 Spanish Half Real
1806 King George III HalfPenny
1819 Coronet Type Large Cent
1820 Coronet Type Large Cent
1824 Coronet Type Large Cent
1840 Coronet Type Large Cent
1865 Two Cent Piece
1867 Shield Type Nickel
1940 Mercury Dime
1951 Washington Quarter
1700+ Unknown Colonial Copper
1796+ Draped Bust Large Cent

HH

Don in Southern South Jersey
 

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Upvote 0

{Sentinel}

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Beauty! Unadulterated BEAUTY
 

piggman1

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That is one sweet looking piece of copper! Way to go!
 

Wasabi

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Nice find, Looks like you brought her back to life.
 

ModernMiner

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Don,
Super find! That coin cleaned up very nicely.
Fantastic post. The pictures, history, and cleaning techniques are amazing.
Congrats and thanks again for sharing,
MM
 

Montana Jim

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Sep 18, 2006
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Big Don!!!

A couple more of those and you can get another bike!

Excellent post and pictures... appreciate you sharing the cleaning pics... great job!

See ya' in the funny papers...

Jim
 

zartan7779

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Dec 3, 2006
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wow man way to go awsome coins ,that is too bad there going do develope that area .

well keep up pull the coins for what time you have
 

Roger Mn.

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the 1819 coronet cent turned out real nice after your cleaning.now i got to post the 1853 braided hair cent i found 5 years ago. my only copper.you are a lucky detectorist to have found so many.you should show all your coppers so we can see them.
 

BuckleBoy

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Jun 12, 2006
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This is an EXCELLENT post, and a great find too.

It makes me happy when members will photograph and share the methods they've used to preserve their finds. It allows folks on this site to make informed decisions about what they can expect to see in terms of results. There are so many cleaning methods--thank you for taking the time to do this. It does us all a service.

Regards,

Buckleboy
 

tymcmurray

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Jul 14, 2007
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Maryland
Don in SJ said:
tymcmurray said:
Extremely Nice find!!
What was the coin fizzing in?

I cleaned the copper in one inch of peroxide, used wet q-tips (14 of them) to remove the stubborn grime and then dried under a lamp and coated with a light layer of wax.
Total cleaning time, attribution and photographing about 2+ hours
Don

Oops! As you can tell, I just like the pretty picture!
 

Postalrevnant

Silver Member
Jul 5, 2006
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Congratulations excellent find. That spot has been very good to you. I have tried to clean a few IH's in Peroxide and it ate them completely. You coin looks excellent. Do you need to remove the coin from Peroxide fairly quickly or is it just the fact that my IH's had corrosion pits allowed them to get ate up?

Congrats again on the great find.

Rev
 

OP
OP
Don in SJ

Don in SJ

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May 20, 2005
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Postalrevnant said:
Congratulations excellent find. That spot has been very good to you. I have tried to clean a few IH's in Peroxide and it ate them completely. You coin looks excellent. Do you need to remove the coin from Peroxide fairly quickly or is it just the fact that my IH's had corrosion pits allowed them to get ate up?

Congrats again on the great find.

Rev

Peroxide did not eat the coin, the coin was already bad from being in the ground. It was being held together only by the dirt and loose corrosion, trust me, I know, I get coins like that also, but if a coin is found in a wooded area, with good drainage and no fertilizer , than there is a good chance it will not have the pitted corrosion that the vast majority of field found and some park found coppers have, there is no hope or miracle to "restore" the integrity of that type of corrosion.

The coin is what it is, I am only removing dirt, not patina, if patina comes off it was not a true patina, which is only a coating over a solid surface!. What I see on most coins that people say cleaning ruined, are coins that were already ruined by the soil.

Don
 

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