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Need Help Locating A Canadian 1968 10 Cent Coin Struck By Philadelphia Mint

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 Posted 09/09/2025  12:05 pm  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add RoLik to your friends list
Crazy that I can't seem to find one in mint state for the life of me.
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 Posted 09/09/2025  12:21 pm  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add mcshilling to your friends list
You may have to buy a bunch of MS dimes and then compare the grooves.
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 Posted 09/09/2025  2:07 pm  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add jbuck to your friends list

Quote:
You may have to buy a bunch of MS dimes and then compare the grooves.
Sounds like a CRH project.
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 Posted 09/09/2025  4:37 pm  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add Smallcentguy to your friends list
I have sent one Philadephia 10 cent to ICCS that came back MS65. I think I sold it for around $50.

I found a whole bunch of MS silver ones a few years back and sold them off on ebay for around $5 to $10 each.

They are around. CRH might work but logic would suggest that you either going to get a roll of strike outs or a roll of successes.

Best way might be to go to a dealer that buys silver and ask to buy a bunch of rolls of 1968 silver.

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 Posted 09/09/2025  10:18 pm  Show Profile   Check 1960NYGiants's eBay Listings Bookmark this reply Add 1960NYGiants to your friends list
According to Charlton, Philadelphia only made nickel blanks for the 1968 10 cents. And only for business strikes.
LM of RCNA
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 Posted 09/10/2025  12:11 am  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add loonielewy to your friends list
I got mine at a coin show, marked as Philly mint, not MS, but needed for the collection. Good luck on the hunt. CRH came up a nogo. Expected though.
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 Posted 09/10/2025  08:15 am  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add RoLik to your friends list
I sent over 3 dozen e-mail to Canadian coin dealers and not a single one wanted to help. It's either they think it's a low cost coin or it's not worth the hassle...

I'm willing to pay for one! I've been offered several AU coins but would really like to find a nice BU one.

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 Posted 09/10/2025  1:36 pm  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add Smallcentguy to your friends list
It is not in the book but there are silver ones out there!
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 Posted 09/10/2025  1:57 pm  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add mcshilling to your friends list
I have both about 10 of each from CRH or I should say silver Philly and Ottawa plus nickel Philly and Ottawa.
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 Posted 09/10/2025  2:55 pm  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add Cdncoins to your friends list
There are silver dimes from Philadelphia I did not know that. The price guides just show the two different for nickel.

From what I gather from people who were around back then, it was a novelty when they first came out, but after a while people didn't really care where they were minted as neither mintage is rare.
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 Posted 09/10/2025  3:37 pm  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add mcshilling to your friends list
My brake down, this what I have,
Silver Philly - 12
.......Ottawa - 24
Nickel Philly -35
.......Ottawa - 29
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Canada
106 Posts
 Posted 09/11/2025  5:10 pm  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add mice45 to your friends list
I think the issue is a misnomer.
Ottawa and Philadelphia 10-cent coins are indistinguishable. What we have there are different collar types. And there are more than 2.
I imagine that the autohr(s) of the original story were scratching their head trying to find any difference. They noticed the difference in the groove shapes and declared that Phily Mint had used US Dime collars. That was a mistake because US Dimes have collars with a different number of reeds and the shape of those does not match any canadian 10 cent.
The error made into Charlton and thus got perpetuated.
Some years ago I did a study and have found different groove shapes on 10 cents going as far as 1960. I did not extend the study to earlier dates.
The prevailing type from 1960 to 1965 was one with flat bottoms and flat tops close to rectangular in shape. Though some coins have a more trapezoid shape.
In 1965 (while preparing to nickel coins) a saw-tooth shape was introduced, which turned into "scalloped" as the collars wear off.
I see that difference between TT-10.2A and TT-10.2B, though my sample is too small to call it true difference.
The flat bottom trapezoid collars (as on the photo at the top of this topic) were the common type for 1966 and 1967, but V-shaped (almost triangular) examples exist.
!968 had seen both flat-bottom and V-shaped grooves on all types of coins - silver, Nickel BS, Nickel PL.
All my 1969 samples are flat-bottom, and in 1970 again both types are present.
Thus, the groove shape does not work as a mint mark.

I think there is a difference which I did not study when I had a big sample. It seems that all Ottawa mint coins (BS, PL) have a rounded edge with groove/reeds having a slope toward the coin planes.
Philadelphia coins have a square edge with grooves reaching into the rim. My current sample is too small to make a conclusion.




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 Posted 09/11/2025  6:31 pm  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add DBM to your friends list
Thank you for that info mice45. We don't know the whole story of the P mint dimes. I don't believe any silver blanks were sent to Philly. It makes no sense, the object here was to strike as many nickel coins as possible to replace the silver coins being removed from circulation.
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Edited by DBM
09/11/2025 6:41 pm
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 Posted 09/11/2025  6:59 pm  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add JimmyD to your friends list
Well thought out theories Mike.
If correct, it would answer many questions such as why
would silver blanks be sent to Philadelphia. Is it possible that
the RCM and US Mint had similar but slightly different collars,
maybe something like the amount of reeds to be able to distinguish the two.
Edited by JimmyD
09/11/2025 7:01 pm
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