found a coin first try

bcs123

Sr. Member
Joined
Aug 15, 2006
Messages
395
Reaction score
17
Golden Thread
0
Location
missouri
Detector(s) used
mxt
new to treasure hunting and need some help i found a 1926 standing liberty quarter the mint mark is gone but there is an "M"in the bottom right next to the date anyone know what it means??? also what would be a good way to clean it? ill post a pic when i get my camera back
 

bcs123 said:
new to treasure hunting and need some help i found a 1926 standing liberty quarter the mint mark is gone but there is an "M"in the bottom right next to the date anyone know what it means??? also what would be a good way to clean it? ill post a pic when i get my camera back

If you want to keep the coin for yourself it doesn't matter how you clean it. But for coin collectors it's recommended that you don't use anything but a bit of soap and water to get the attached dirt off, and don't scrub or polish it at all. The value drops significantly if you do.
 

Upvote 0
bcs:
Welcome to the world of treasure hunting. Ask all the Q.s you wish right here; someone will most likely have your answer.
The "M" on your '26 standing liberty type quarter represents the coin's designor, Herman A. MacNeil.
Don.....
 

Upvote 0
And don't use acid. In days gone by, I collected coins for myself (not to sell), and I used ketchup to clean them. The acid in ketchup is pretty corrosive and can turn an old coin bright in about 24 hours --- you just submerge the coin in a dollop of ketchup and leave it. When the coins were bright, I rinsed them, oiled them and placed them in my display. Many years later, I gave the collection to my nephew. Eventually, he tried to sell them and was disappointed to find out that my acid treatment was unacceptable to "real" collectors. Well, I told him not to try to sell them.

Still, ketchup is not as bad as treating coins with mercury. That was my older brother's technique. Brilliant coins in a matter of seconds, just shuffling them around in a dish of mercury. Unfortunately, this method is so abrasive that it can literally polish the relief right off of the coin's face.

:-\
 

Upvote 0
bcs:
Actually, his first name is Hermon, not Herman.

Here's some more:

In 1966, New York Mayor, John V. Lindsay, signed his first local law, which renamed Chisholm Park (aka College Point Shore Front Partk) for Hermon Atkins MacNeil (1866-1947), a College Point resident and nationally renowned sculptor. At the ceremony, standing besides the mayor was a College Point neighbor who had posed for MacNeil’s sculptures. Doris Doscher Baum served as the model for the artist’s most widely seen work: the Standing Liberty quarter, which was first minted in 1916.

MacNeil’s sculptures can be seen in four of the five boroughs in New York City, including Washington as Commander-in-Chief at the base of the Washington Square Arch in Manhattan; a cast of his Sun Vow in the Pratt Institute in Brooklyn; the Flushing War Memorial in Queens; and four busts in the Hall of Fame of Great Americans at Bronx Community College. His other notable works include the figures on the eastern pediment of the Supreme Court Building in Washington D.C. and Out From Chaos Came the Dawn, which earned him the honor of being the first American to receive the Prix de Rome.

Don.......
 

Upvote 0
Mighty AP:

Thanks for the kind words.
I find the questions challenging; they can stimulate interest leading to research and reward by locating the answer and putting the answer back on the thread; a Win-Win situation, certainly for me and perhaps shared by others.
Don..
 

Upvote 0
heres a pic of my coin
 

Attachments

  • standing liberty.webp
    standing liberty.webp
    5.8 KB · Views: 259
Upvote 0
heres the back
 

Attachments

  • standing liberty back.webp
    standing liberty back.webp
    5.3 KB · Views: 257
Upvote 0
That's really good condition for a dug SLQ!. Don't do anything to it. Tony
 

Upvote 0

Top Member Reactions

Users who are viewing this thread

Back
Top Bottom