Remarriage. The discovery coin for this remarriage, April 23, 1993. Lustrous light gray with pale heather and iridescent toning. A reverse scratch is in the field over the eagle's right wing. Russ Logan prepared an article about this remarriage in Volume 8, Issue 1 of the Journal. He later purchased this coin for his collection.

There are very few known remarriages within the Capped Bust half dollar series. Part of the reason is that, until recently, very few collectors considered searching for these. With only a couple notable exceptions, there has actually been very little published research on emission sequences for this series. Perhaps the most notable reason for the lack of remarriages, however, is that the majority of dies for Bust halves were unique to a single die marriage.

This example was clearly struck after the 1829 O-110 later in this offering. These varieties share the same reverse die. Cracked from olive leaves to 50 with a second crack through base of 50 C to the period and border at the lowest arrowhead. Another die crack from the middle pair of olive leaves joins UNITE to the border. An additional crack from this point at the border continues through D STA. A weak die crack from right top of first T passes over ATES and becomes stronger through tops of OF AME to the border over R.

Previously certified Net EF-45 by ANACS.

Purchased May 28, 2000 from Norm Talbert. Ex Charles Erb. Earlier from D & S Coins, February 1988. Norm Talbert is the proprietor of Great Lakes Coin Co., Rocky River, Ohio.