lawsonland
Full Member
- Oct 1, 2007
- 223
- 295
- Detector(s) used
-
Currently use CTX, Excalibur
Have used V3I, DFX, BHID, ATX, Etrac, TDI, Infinium
- Primary Interest:
- All Treasure Hunting
Upvote
36
I'm 98% sure you have an Oak Tree Shilling NOE 9. Some pretty decent indicators on these. The large space between the T and H. The one thick line in the X. A few others as well. This particular variety was often clipped at the mint to discard some weight. This is a URS 7 33-64 known. Great find with a very odd wear pattern.
Agreed.
Well done. Congrats.
Abe... Almost same condition as yours :P ...
I'm 98% sure you have an Oak Tree Shilling NOE 9. Some pretty decent indicators on these. The large space between the T and H. The one thick line in the X. A few others as well. This particular variety was often clipped at the mint to discard some weight. This is a URS 7 33-64 known. Great find with a very odd wear pattern.
Jon I would not have it graded and slabbed. All of the labels will be negative and there's a good chance they won't even label the variety correctly. SilverTreeChaser on here had a terrible experience with a beautiful tree coin he sent out. I found this one last year and have not had it slabbed yet. I put it in a safe place and protected it. I figure if I decide to at some point I can.Thank you very much for this information. What should I do with this- Is it worth the cost to have it graded and put into a protector or is just the cardboard holder sufficient,
Thanks for your time
Jon