Anyone here a fan on these? Vere little is known about them but thankfully Howland Wood made sense of the die linkages and created a numbering system. This is Wood 23, one of the most interesting varieties in the series. There is an extensive die break dexter which widens and extends to provide several distinct die states. Here we see an early die state known as 23b. None are known without the die break but the variety designation remains open in case one is discovered. Canadian Blacksmith Coppers share a common feature of having no inscriptions or date, and were made from intentionally flatly engraved dies with little detail.
A tantalizing series of coins, that do turn up on the forum now and again, occasionally unidentified (to perplex the copper fanciers with their backwards Britannias!). That's a nice one.
My first chapter in the Forgotten Book - Revisited between November - February 2015 is on Blacksmiths ... if you have questions I will try to answer ...
If you can find it - see Ernie Everingham Collection which is the ONLY catalg that pictures/describes all of them in detail (except for the terminal state DS8 as I recall).
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