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Bet You Don't Have One Of These In Your Collection

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Pillar of the Community
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1801 Posts
 Posted 06/25/2012  11:28 pm  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add jfransch to your friends list
Well I do have one of these, 1733 Spanish 8 reales encrusted onto a canonball from a 1733 shipwreck.

Bet-You-Don't-Have-One-Of-These-In-Your-Collection
Bedrock of the Community
13014 Posts
 Posted 06/25/2012  11:28 pm  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add basebal21 to your friends list

Quote:
Be fun to send to a TPG. Wonder what they'd say.


I would want the rock slabbed too
Pillar of the Community
United States
2077 Posts
 Posted 06/25/2012  11:32 pm  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add OldSkoolMadSkilz to your friends list

Quote:
Well I do have one of these, 1733 Spanish 8 reales encrusted onto a canonball from a 1733 shipwreck.


Guess I'm wrong. Someone else did have one of these. Or close enough.
Pillar of the Community
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3184 Posts
 Posted 06/25/2012  11:51 pm  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add mkman123 to your friends list
lol yuck
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3755 Posts
 Posted 06/25/2012  11:54 pm  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add smokeriderdon to your friends list
The river is dredged for numerous reasons. They also dredged in that area to create the Deleware-Chesapeake canal.

And as jfransch shows, it is not at all fishy. Its a rather interesting piece.
Pillar of the Community
United States
4897 Posts
 Posted 06/26/2012  12:03 am  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add amida17 to your friends list
I was only poking fun at his description as ".Coin adhered to the rock from ironazation". Ironization....simply is not a word.


I get dredging. I live near the Upper Hudson. Dredging has been a topic here for over a decade.....thanks GE
New Member
United States
19 Posts
 Posted 06/26/2012  10:50 am  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add Calaglin to your friends list
^ Albany NY FTW
Valued Member
Australia
145 Posts
 Posted 06/26/2012  11:25 am  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add lostsean to your friends list
It seems like this could be the next crazy fade, I want one(prefer a Australian coin, if possible please ) :)
Edited by lostsean
06/26/2012 11:26 am
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1888 Posts
 Posted 06/26/2012  11:41 am  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add mysilveryears to your friends list
Part of the Delaware river is currently being dredged again by the Army Corps of Engineers, and there is a massive spoils pile in South Jersey to pick through if you can gain access to it. Might want to wear heavy gloves and boots and be sure your health insurance is up to date.
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 Posted 06/26/2012  12:47 pm  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add paleoguy45 to your friends list
Might find some unique examples of concretion-encased boots in that NJ spoils pile.
Valued Member
United States
470 Posts
 Posted 06/26/2012  1:47 pm  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add Andrew289 to your friends list

Quote:
Maybe they were dredging the Delaware for Washington's silver dollar.


History Lesson Time-Out:

Did George Washington really throw a silver dollar across the Potomac River?

Being quite capable of doing a feat of significant strength, George Washington was a large and powerful man. He stood 6 feet, 2 inches tall and in later life weighed more than 200 pounds. He wore large shoes (size 13), and stood with an erect military bearing. His face was long with high cheekbones, and he had a large, straight nose, a firm chin, and blue eyes beneath heavy brows.

But alas, his famous coin toss is apparently not the whole truth. This popular myth is often told to illustrate his strength, but the river was not the Potomac (about a mile wide) nor was it the Delaware. Looking at his childhood homestead, perhaps it was the Rappahannock River near Fredericksburg, Virginia. According to myth, Washington threw a piece of slate, about the size and shape of a dollar, not a actual silver dollar. This account took place according to Martha Washington's grandson, George Washington Parke Custis. While the story has never been verified, historians concede that the feat is a possibility. At the site of the Washington family homestead, the Rappahannock measures only 250 feet across, an impressive but not impossible throwing distance.

Moreover, there were no US silver dollars available when Washington was a young man. If it was any coin at all, it may have been a Spanish 8 Reales. The Spanish Milled Dollar was minted on a coin press from 1732-1826 where-as the term "milled" refers to the fact that the coin blanks (planchets) were made on a milling machine and were of consistent weight and size of 27.1 grams and 1.65 inches in diameter, slightly larger than the US dollar.
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238 Posts
 Posted 06/26/2012  2:08 pm  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add rycolemet to your friends list
guess they are going for the coin collectors who are also rock collectors niche!
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1704 Posts
 Posted 06/26/2012  3:12 pm  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add Gyrene7483 to your friends list
I'd pay $20.00 for it as a paperweight, but not a cent more. It would make a nice conversation piece.

Ed
ANA LM-3175
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 Posted 06/26/2012  8:10 pm  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add M0nks to your friends list
i guess you have to buy the rock for 69 bucks and the coin is free
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 Posted 06/26/2012  8:38 pm  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add OneBowl to your friends list
jfransch...that shipwreck 8 reales/cannonball is simply amazing. No doubt a personal dive find. Thanks for posting.

I find the large cent/rock somewhat interesting as well. While the majority here may not appreciate it, I bet if anybody placed that and a completed 7070 next to each other on a desk, the 7070 would be a distant second in attracting interest and comments.
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