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Interesting Value For The 1894-S Dime

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 Posted 07/05/2023  4:59 pm  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add Coinfrog to your friends list
Good grief!
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 Posted 07/05/2023  5:38 pm  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add Maine Member to your friends list
Inflation is an enemy for all, even numismatists. I try to stick to Keys like this one, I was born in 1960. We were able to buy 6 Hershey bars for 25 cents plus 1 cent tax. (They were what is marketed now as King Size). In the seventies we still saw 90% silver in the circulating coinage, and I hoarded all of it, including the 40% Kennedy's from 65 to 69.
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 Posted 07/05/2023  9:18 pm  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add apcol258 to your friends list
Not my series, but in the last 130 years has there ever even been a documented example of one in any grade below uncirculated condition?
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 Posted 07/05/2023  9:22 pm  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add HondoB to your friends list
All 24 1894-S dimes were Proofs.
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 Posted 07/06/2023  04:49 am  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add nickelsearcher to your friends list
I say that is simply a made up value because they had to print something. Would have been more accurate to say N/A.
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 Posted 07/06/2023  08:32 am  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add jacrispies to your friends list
Check the Trade dollar page, there may be some coins under face value. I have seen some early price guides when the Trade dollars were treated like the common face value Presidential dollars of today!
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 Posted 07/06/2023  11:26 am  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add jbuck to your friends list

Quote:
All 24 1894-S dimes were Proofs.
I did not realize that (not my series). I should have checked my Red Book first.

Now I wonder why Numismedia lists values for all circulation grades for it.


Quote:
I say that is simply a made up value because they had to print something. Would have been more accurate to say N/A.
Seems that I have to agree.
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 Posted 07/06/2023  12:19 pm  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add jpsned to your friends list

Quote:
All 24 1894-S dimes were Proofs.


While the coins may exhibit proof-like qualities, technically they are not proof coins. "Proof" refers to the way the coin was manufactured and not its condition. Many first-run coins exhibit proof-like qualities because the dies are new. The dimes should thus be properly referred to as "proof-like." There is no evidence that the dies were prepared as proofs. It's likely that people referred to them as proofs in order to make the seem more valuable. In any event, they are first business strikes, not proofs.
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 Posted 07/06/2023  12:24 pm  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add jpsned to your friends list

Quote:
I say that is simply a made up value because they had to print something. Would have been more accurate to say N/A.


I agree. In 1946, these coins were only 52 years old and the numismatic world knew a lot less about them than it does today. I can see the editors scratching their heads and thinking, "How do we assign a value to a coin with such a small mintage?", with the answer being, "I got an idea. Let's just say $50 and $150 and be done with it. That's a lot of money and people will be impressed."
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 Posted 07/06/2023  12:34 pm  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add jpsned to your friends list

Quote:
Not my series, but in the last 130 years has there ever even been a documented example of one in any grade below uncirculated condition?


Out of 24 coins minted, ten are known. Eight are graded as proofs (though technically they're not proofs, only proof-like). The ninth specimen--found in a Gimbel's department store junk cash box in 1957 and purchased for $2.40--is graded G4. The tenth coin is graded AG4.
Edited by jpsned
07/06/2023 12:37 pm
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 Posted 07/06/2023  4:34 pm  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add jbuck to your friends list

Quote:
Out of 24 coins minted, ten are known. Eight are graded as proofs (though technically they're not proofs, only proof-like). The ninth specimen--found in a Gimbel's department store junk cash box in 1957 and purchased for $2.40--is graded G4. The tenth coin is graded AG4.
Thank you for the rundown! So it is correct to offer the full range of prices. One of the 14 remaining coins could theoretically turn up in any condition. I will not be holding my breath though.
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 Posted 07/06/2023  6:17 pm  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add jpsned to your friends list
You're welcome!

Here's another interesting tidbit: According to Mint authorities, out of the 24 minted, 10 were melted and 14 went into circulation. So, minus these known 10, four dimes are still unaccounted for. Check your change!
Edited by jpsned
07/06/2023 6:27 pm
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 Posted 07/06/2023  6:59 pm  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add kbbpll to your friends list
Barber dimes circulated a lot. It's possible an 1894-S is sitting in someone's collection with the mint mark area completely worn off.
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 Posted 07/06/2023  7:10 pm  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add Coinfrog to your friends list
Interesting to speculate!
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 Posted 07/07/2023  09:39 am  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add jbuck to your friends list

Quote:
...four dimes are still unaccounted for. Check your change!



Quote:
It's possible an 1894-S is sitting in someone's collection with the mint mark area completely worn off.
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