Canadian Blacksmiths and Die Links Pubblico Deposited

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  • From jlorenzo@ob.ilww.com Tue Oct 07 06:52:42 2003
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    Date: Tue, 07 Oct 2003 13:52:36 -0000
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    Subject: Canadian Blacksmiths and Die Links
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    From: "John Lorenzo" <jlorenzo@ob.ilww.com>
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    As previously mentioned (briefly) back during 4/99 Wayne Jacobs sent
    me his thoughts on Canadian Blacksmiths I just thought one short
    passage would be enjoyable from his treatise on these fascinating
    issues. I am seeing a surge in these issues "as of late" as with the
    British imports contemporaries. His passage on "DIE LINKS" is most
    instructive and clearly shows how well and disciplined a mind Jacobs
    has in the field of Canadian numismatics:
    Woods research showed that many of the "Balcksmiths" were linked by
    their dies, indicating production in a "single house."
    Wood Numbers 1-10 are all linked through dies which show a common
    place of origin. Numbers 11 and 12 share a common obverse and,
    although not die linked to the first group, resemble it in design and
    style. The same could be said of numbers 16-18 which are, in
    themselves, die linked. Wood 13 and 14/15 stand alone but "still"
    resemble all of the above.
    Wood 19-22 are all die linked but seem to be from a different mint if
    not from a different era, being "Blacksmith" copies of
    either "Tiffins or the Bust-Harp types.
    The last big group is Woods 23-28 and Jacobs believes the common Wood
    23 was an earlier issue and in later years became badly rusted and
    broken and paired up with home-made and or/discarded dies of a couple
    of storecards from the 1830's to create the "much rarer" Woods 24-28.
    All the rest stand by themselves except for Wood 33. JPL-Believe this
    to be a mis-attributed evasion due to its extreme "Common" nature.
    The earlier Woods of George II seem to have been produced on a large
    scale.
    JPL-Again, metallurgical make-up of these specimens will no doubt be
    different than the Georgian British imports or "dirtier" with their
    trace metals. I am certain this will be seen over the next several
    years. I await the information on these unlinked Machins but everone
    at this point knows my opinion on these pieces. The "time period" in
    which these Machin pieces were discovered, the diagnostices used in
    the "80's" to classify these as Machins, the uncertainty in
    undertypes which has recently been "called-up" as proof all need to
    be reviewed again. Are State Coppers overstruck on Machins or are
    these "imagined" to be O/S on Machins as one cataloguer recently
    alluded to in an upcoming sale.
    Contemporary Counterfeits-The last frontier in American Numismatics-
    Love it or Leave It!!!


URL di origine Data di pubblicazione
  • 2003-10-07
Volume
  • 1

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Autore NNP