Back button

Greysheet & CPG® PRICE GUIDE

Year

Sort by

About This Series

The Patterns (1810) series of Pattern Coinage in the U.S. Coins contains 1 distinct entries.

History and Overview

The listed variety of this year is a private restrike from mismatched dies. This year continues the long stretch after 1799 for which no contemporary pattern or trial pieces are known to exist.

J-41, a private restrike from mismatched dies, combines an 1810 cent obverse (Sheldon-285) with a reverse used in 1820 to strike cents of the Newcomb-12 variety. This identical reverse was used to make the so-called “restrike” 1804 cents in copper and tin (here listed as white metal).

Collecting Perspective

Examples of the 1810 cent

...

Catalog Detail

  Patterns (1810) Value Range Favorite
Patterns (1810) Value Range  
1810 P1c Private Restrike, Tin, J-41 MS
-
 

Visit these great CDN Sponsors

CDN Sponsors

       

From the Greysheet Marketplace

Related Stories (powered by Greysheet News)

View all news
Early American Half Dimes 1792 - 1837
4/5/2025 by Michael Garofalo

This earliest half dimes have been the subject of more than two centuries of rumors, innuendo, and conjecture.

No, You Don't Have A $124 Million Penny, Advises Professional Numismatists Guild
4/3/2025 by Professional Numismatists Guild (PNG)

Rare coin experts caution the public about false and misleading stories about rare coin values.

The Business of Numismatics: April 2025 Greysheet Editor's Letter
4/3/2025 by Patrick Ian Perez

With a handful of major coin conventions already come and gone, and with the first Whitman Baltimore Expo right around the corner, the rare coin market has proven very resilient in the face of corrections in other markets.

Greysheet Catalog Details

The Patterns (1810) series of Pattern Coinage in the U.S. Coins contains 1 distinct entries.

History and Overview

The listed variety of this year is a private restrike from mismatched dies. This year continues the long stretch after 1799 for which no contemporary pattern or trial pieces are known to exist.

J-41, a private restrike from mismatched dies, combines an 1810 cent obverse (Sheldon-285) with a reverse used in 1820 to strike cents of the Newcomb-12 variety. This identical reverse was used to make the so-called “restrike” 1804 cents in copper and tin (here listed as white metal).

Collecting Perspective

Examples of the 1810 cent

...

Catalog Detail