This forum is for discussing hunting and collecting US and Canadian circulation Silver Bullion Coins, other types of minted bullion, and other types of precious and base metal investments other than Bullion Pennies and Nickels.
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by realmoneyHOARDER » Sun Jun 05, 2011 2:02 pm
Hello all.
Just have a question here. I have a gold british half sovereign dated 1918.
It has King George IV on the obverse. For mint marks, the only thing I have found is what seems to be a small "O" on the ground under the horse on which St. George is seated on the reverse.
I was wondering if this would have any extra, numismatic value over spot.
Any help would be highly appreciated.
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realmoneyHOARDER
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by CDNHoard » Mon Jun 06, 2011 4:41 pm
Never heard of an O mark. C means Ottawa (Canada). They are nice coins, but not much numismatic interest except for a few rare years (1916C seems to me). I would hang on to it, just for coolness factor. as good as any other gold coin.
Rick
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CDNHoard
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by Somnophore » Mon Jun 06, 2011 4:56 pm
There is no O mint mark, there is a C as stated. If it's a C it's Reasonably rare they only
minted those for 10 years I think around 100,000 minted that year so will be worth more than scrap value, they were minted to coin the gold from the Yukon gold rush.
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Somnophore
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