Home |
Search |
Today's Posts |
|
#1
![]() |
|||
|
|||
![]()
I know, I know. But if you follow the links on that very page which
shows the re-strike you would note that the originals were made mostly of red bronze - not copper. They were red. Why do I always have to deal with idiots. Lord help me. CN "John Cairns" wrote in message om... "Capt. Neal®" wrote in message ... Don't listen to Cairns. He's an idiot. http://www.coinfacts.com/confederate...ike_copper.htm Did you even bother to read the link you posted, or did you just look at the pretty picture? "A red cent was a Confederate coin. When the South lost the war a red cent was worth nothing." CN If you bother to read your own link, you'll notice that this particular coin was minted over twenty years after the war ended. http://www.pcgs.com/articles/article3187.chtml "Yet oddly enough, the Confederate Government contacted the renowned Philadelphia jewelers, Bailey & Co. about a contract coinage. The firm, well connected with medalists and diesinkers, commissioned Robert Lovett Jr. for the job. Lovett planned for something uniform with the United States one-cent piece, weighing 4.67 grams and of the same size as the copper-nickel Indian cent. He prepared a die which had his signature design, a Liberty Head, on the obverse, surrounded by the words "Confederate States of America 1861." The reverse bore the inscription "1 cent" surrounded by a wreath of corn, cotton, maple, wheat and tobacco, and two barrels. At the beginning of the wreath lay a cotton bale signed "L." Although Lovett prepared dies for the one-cent pieces and struck twelve coins in copper-nickel, he never handed over the samples to Confederate officials for inspection. Fearing that the United States government might arrest him for assisting the enemy, he dropped the project and buried the dies and coins in his cellar. Even when the war was over, Lovett was reluctant to show them." People collected coins in the 19th century, a confederate "red cent" would have been worth much more than face value even in the 19th century. John Cairns "Scott Vernon" wrote in message ... "Bob Crantz" wrote in message ink.net... I'm not donating one red cent either. I wish our Federal government refunded the aid money to us taxpayers so each of us could decide its best use. According to Mooron, it was only 12 cents. Where did the phrase ''red cent'' come from? Scotty |
Thread Tools | Search this Thread |
Display Modes | |
|
|
![]() |
||||
Thread | Forum | |||
Don't Sail with Per! | ASA |