1821 capped bust half dollar

$digger$

Greenie
Mar 18, 2013
17
20
suffolk, long island
Detector(s) used
coinmaster, coinmaster gt
Primary Interest:
All Treasure Hunting
went to my new site and found this 1821 capped bust, but it aint silver, its a copper counterfeit, not pewter. was so excited when I dug it, but now have no clue what I really have, havnt done any cleaning to it yet. rings up as +50
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Upvote 12
Wow........ wonder what the value on a counterfeit would be. Killer find either way. Congrats:icon_thumleft:
 

polls_wtg_1140_678478_answer_1_xlarge.gif counterfeits are still worth money - at least the old ones are
 

Counterfeits Are Sometimes More Cool Than The Real Thing! Nice Find!
 

woooow! amazing find.
 

Very Kool....and highly collectible. Some guys pay really good for these well made CFT's. Congrats..........Hogge
 

Very nice and unusual find.
Way to go!!! :hello2:
-MM-
 

Super unusual and super desirable coin find. Congrats!
 

thanks all, and thanks for that link, just learned it my be brass, not copper
 

More value than the real deal , :icon_scratch:
unbelievable , a bogus copper Capped Bust half :o
 

I have a 1833 or 1834 half-dollar counterfeit made of brass with "United States Of America fifty cents" around the rim. That I dug. What is the value of one of those in good shape?Open to offers!!!
 

Great find! I am still waiting to find ANY bust coin.
 

Great find, now get back there and check for more, keep digging. Congrats on a very cool find.
 

Still a very cool find.
 

Actually contemporary counterfeit bust half dollars are quite common and were probably the most counterfeited coin made at the time. I know someone who collected them and had at least 150 of them as of 25 years ago. In the late 1700's it was the British halfpence that was widely counterfeited. I found two British halfpence this summer, both were counterfeit. Didn't find any real ones. When it comes to British halfpence, I'd rather find the counterfeits. I'm not sure with a bust half. I guess it would depend on the condition. Either way, NICE FIND!
 

Is there a prevailing theory as to how these period counterfeits were made ?- I have to assume they were cast in some way rather than die
struck- as I have no idea how one could create steel dies to duplicate the originals . Great find !
 

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