Black Mountain Coins Newsletter
In This Issue
Monster Wheaties
Cuzco Hoard 8 Reales
Victoria's Model Crown
The Greatest Generation
Young Collectors
Carson City Mint
N American Hunting Club
Tribal Medals
The Racketeer Nickel

Staff Picks

Each of the 5 of us (Dan, Greg, Liz, Clark & Bob) who work at our shop has a specific area of responsibility that entails different interactions with the coins, products and customers that give us our reason for being here. We also each have our own unique interests that draw our attention to particular pieces. Below you will find what each of us has found most striking or curious in the past week.

Dan Lewis:  Owner, Diplomate of Numismatics USA - Monster Bag of 5,000 Wheat Pennies - Free Domestic Shipping - 1909/1958 - Unsearched

Monster Bag of Wheat Cents "With the price of copper skyrocketing, unsearched bags of Wheat Cents have become extremely popular. We have literally bought hundreds of thousands of these coins and do not have the time to go through them, so we count them and bag them just as they are when they come into the shop. Because we get our coins from multiple sources, there is no telling what you will find in one of these bags. Each bag is guaranteed to be unsearched and to give you many hours of numismatic pleasure!" 

Price: $364.99

Greg Capps:  

Shop Numismatist

Cuzco Hoard of Potosi Bolivia 8 Reales Charles IIII 1804 P.J. NGC-AU58 

Cuzco Hoard - Potosi - Piece of Eight - 8 Reales - Charles IIII - 1804 P.J. "Naturally, my pick is an 1804 Silver Dollar.   Well, sort of.   It was minted in 1804 and it is made of silver.  In fact, at 8 bits, it traded on par with our American Dollar until the mid 19th century.  What more could you ask for? 

       Well, as if the above wasn't reason enough to fall in love with this NGC graded coin, it also hails from the famed Cusco Hoard.   Cuzco (now spelled Cusco) is a city in southeastern Peru, near the Urubamba Valley of the Andes mountain range.   The city was founded around the 12th century in what is now Peru and is about 110 kilometers south of the fortress city at Machu Picchu. Like other ancient cities Cusco was built based on the alignment of buildings with astronomical events such as the winter and summer solstice. According to tradition the city was conceived as a puma incorporating a nearby hill as its head and the main temple of the capital as its stomach. The tail of the puma is formed where the Tullumayo and Huatanay rivers join.  Cusco's layout was meant to replicate a puma constellation, which the Inca said was formed not of stars but the dark spaces between the stars."

Price: $499.99

Clark Chapin:  

Numismatic Photographer Great Britain - Young Victoria 1848 Model Crown - Very Fine!

Great Britain - Victoria - Model Penny - 1848 - Very Fine "I've tended to draw a collector's line at the reign of Queen Victoria - at least in terms of British non-colonial copper, but this piece in splendid in terms of design, elemental composition & condition. If you have a weakness for British or 19th century coins and medals then I think you're as likely as me to be captivated by this historic medal."   

Price: $74.99

Bob Manis:  

Customer Service 

50th Anniversary of Word War II

50th Anniversary of World War II  9 Piece Proof Set Fine Silver "This is a celebration of the Greatest Generation. Those American who saw and served in WWII showed what we can do with courage & purpose. I have the utmost respect for this generation. We should honor them by keeping America strong & free." 

Price: $549.99

Liz Duncan:  

Shipping  

Australia - Young Collectors Wildlife Series - 12 $1 Coins - 2008 - Album

Australia's Young Collectors Set - 2008 "This is a darling set of Australian Animal coins from 2008. The picture doesn't show what I think makes this young collector's set so wonderful, so you'll have to click on it to see the pictures Clark took. This is one I'd be very happy buying for my grand-daughters." 

Price: $99.99

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CARSON CITY & HOW THE WEST WAS WON 

By Greg Capps

 

       No other mint evokes the imagery of our American Old West better than the Carson City Mint. They produced silver and gold coins with ore mined from the famous Comstock Lode and other Western mines between 1870 and 1893 and was the only U.S. mint to carry a dual character mintmark on its coins: the famous "CC".

Carson City M int
Front Elevation, U.S. Branch Mint, Carson City, Nevada
By Alfred B. Mullet, 1866

       Among the coins struck at this Old West mint was the popular Morgan Silver Dollar, named after its designer, George T. Morgan. One of the most collected silver coins in our history, the Morgan Silver Dollar was first struck in 1878 and continued to be minted through 1904 with a single year reprise in 1921. However, the Carson City Mint did not mint the Morgan Silver Dollar after 1893.  

       The Carson City Morgans can be quickly divided into two groups: the ones minted between 1878 and 1885 and the ones struck between 1889 and 1893. The key date of the first group, particularly in grades above Very Fine, is the 1879-CC. In the second group, the 1889-CC is the prize by far.

Carson City Morgan Carson City Morgan

       Relative to their contemporaries produced at the other mints, the Carson City products have low mintages. However, because of some hoards created through storage, some of the dates are much more available in uncirculated grades than you would expect from their low mintages. This is particularly true for the 1882, 1883, and 1884-CCs, all of which had mintages of just a little over 1 million coins apiece. As it turns out, few were released into circulation, and more than half of each date was still available in uncirculated condition at the time of the General Services Administration sales of unreleased Carson City silver dollars.

       For all that its products are revered today, the Carson City Mint was unpopular during its lifetime. In fact, according to Q. David Bowers, writing in Silver Dollars & Trade Dollars of the United States: A Complete Encyclopedia, the local railroads set up tariffs that made it cheaper to take bullion from the nearby mines all the way to San Francisco to be turned into coins than to deliver it to the Carson City Mint.

       Still, with all the contemporary opposition to it, the Carson City Mint turned out gold and silver coins that continue to fire the imaginations of today's collectors. Probably none of these coins are more interesting and widely dispersed than the Carson City Morgan dollars.  Today, these Dollars can be the foundation of any portfolio - as an investment, part of a collection, or as a way to preserve money in times of inflation or instability.


North American Hunting Club Medals

 

       We've just posted these 10 wonderful medals struck by the Franklin Mint in 1973 of 0.825oz pure silver and honoring some of the most influential Native American tribes. The original set featured 40 separate commemoratives. Very few complete sets now remain, but the individual medals are finding their way into the secondary market. We're glad to have had these arrive and are sure that they will prove meaningful to our many collectors of Native American and U.S. Historical Commemoratives. If you consider yourself to share these interests then you may also enjoy seeing our more extensive collection of Native American Coins & Medals

Native American Tribal Medals

The tribes represented in this Franklin Mint Collection are:

Other items in our more extensive collection also honor:


        How many people can say they actually caused the United States Mint to alter the design of a coin?  Josh Tatum is perhaps the lone individual who can make this claim.   

V Nickel

       By placing a large Roman numeral "V" and leaving the words "Five Cents" off the new design for the 1883 nickel, designer Charles Barber did not realize what trouble it would cause. Very rapidly, some people began to gold-plate this coin and pass it off to shopkeepers as a $5 gold piece. It quickly became known as the Racketeer Nickel. Although many men plated these V-nickels, the most famous man was Joshua Tatum.  

       He frequented saloons and tobacco shops mostly, making small purchases and paying for them with the altered nickels but receiving change for $5. When he was finally arrested and brought to trial, he was acquitted! Joshua Tatum was a deaf-mute and never told anyone he was giving them a gold coin so fraud could not be proven! Needless to say, the government had Mr. Barber add "Cents" to the coin and thereby solved the problem of Racketeer Nickels.  

       If you've ever heard the saying, "I'm just joshing", that's where it came from...old Joshua Tatum. This gold-plated genuine 1883 V-nickel comes as shown on a descriptive card that tells the story of the Racketeer Nickel.

Racketeer Nickel

  

Imperial Eggs in Cloisonné  

Cook Islands Imperial Eggs