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From the Shanghai Mint?
Oh I'm fairly sure it's Guangdong, not Shanghai. :-)
The scarier thing is that there are some of these circulating as genuine *right now*.
Here's a closer look at the lineup:
- 4 fake double eagles. (1933 St. Gaudens hah!; 1885-CC, 1872 pattern, 1891)
- 1 fake gold eagle. (1933 Indian Head hee hee)
- 1 fake gold 3 dollars. (1876)
- 1 fake gold half eagle. (1929)
- 1 fake gold quarter eagle. (1840)

Out of all of them, the most ridiculous was the St. Gaudens. The strike is as flat as a pancake and the 1933 just makes it too good to be true. :-)
The 1885 and 1891 could probably fool a casual or new collector easily.
The 1872 pattern is *really* well done. The reverse is solid and full of detail, but the hair detail on the obverse is lacking.
Liberty on the 1933 gold eagle is sad with its strike although the reverse is rather convincing.
The 3 dollar piece is probably the most convincing of the lot and I could see that one fooling a careless dealer if it were mixed in with other coins. It's my favorite of the bunch.
The 1929's rims on the reverse I think are the biggest giveaway with a poor strike around the edge, but the obverse is really well executed.
Finally, the 1840 quarter eagle
would have been the best of the lot, if it weren't for that horridly misshapen date.
Nabbed them at $3.30 a piece. :-)