Mystery coin

AP552

Jr. Member
Apr 9, 2015
84
265
Southeastern Mass
Detector(s) used
Garrett AT pro
AT max
Primary Interest:
Metal Detecting
Found this tonight in an old farm field, rang up as a 77 on my AT Pro and was down about 8 inches. I've found some crusty coppers before but they were always large cent sized. I can't see any detail, debating on a peroxide bath for it. Definitely copper, looks to me like it's half cent sized but I have never found one before so I can't really compare it to any other past finds. Anyways here it is, thanks for looking. HH image.jpegimage.jpeg
 

Upvote 5
Might be able to tell something if you measure it and weigh it. Neat to know it's something old!
 

Oy! That one may remain a mystery. People may slay me for saying so but I've taken coins that look exactly like yours and used light sand paper. It went from a blank to something I could ID.

Good luck
 

Oy! That one may remain a mystery. People may slay me for saying so but I've taken coins that look exactly like yours and used light sand paper. It went from a blank to something I could ID.

Good luck

Lol. You know, I have done the same. A few of them actually came out pretty decent. The best was this 1674 farthing. You can see the scratch marks esp on the reverse. But hey, this is quite a presentable item now. I did this one some 20 years ago.
 

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Oy! That one may remain a mystery. People may slay me for saying so but I've taken coins that look exactly like yours and used light sand paper. It went from a blank to something I could ID.

Good luck

I have too, when you got nothing, you got nothing to loose.
A coin with virtually no relief left i did 400-600 grit on a flat surface, and rubbed the coin on that, gained a couple of faint letters just enough for a pos. ID. Mostly though not really worth the effort, except the satisfaction of knowing.
 

I have too, when you got nothing, you got nothing to loose.
A coin with virtually no relief left i did 400-600 grit on a flat surface, and rubbed the coin on that, gained a couple of faint letters just enough for a pos. ID. Mostly though not really worth the effort, except the satisfaction of knowing.

Lol. You know, I have done the same. A few of them actually came out pretty decent. The best was this 1674 farthing. You can see the scratch marks esp on the reverse. But hey, this is quite a presentable item now. I did this one some 20 years ago.

Haha! Awesome to hear! I've actually pulled dates after sanding. One was a draped bust half cent! The others mostly common British coppers and the sanding just gave me a good outline.
 

its hard to id them when there toasted i find best chance is leave it soak for a day or 2 in olive oil and then toothbrush it and you might get enough for id :tongue3:
 

Looks like ca 1723 Hibernia to me. :occasion14:
 

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Looks like 1723 Hibernia to me (if it is one, thats prob the most likely date). :occasion14:


I would have posted the same thing just before you, but went to grab a pic.
 

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Lol. You know, I have done the same. A few of them actually came out pretty decent. The best was this 1674 farthing. You can see the scratch marks esp on the reverse. But hey, this is quite a presentable item now. I did this one some 20 years ago.

I don't think that looks too bad considering what it took.
 

i dug a LC last week out of a drained mill race that was toast. i dipped in mineral oil once or twice a day for
3 or 4 days. i wiped it down every time before dipping it. now i can see everything but the date.
the mineral oil got into the years of crud and popped it loose.
 

Nice coin recovery and restoration!
 

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