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rrantique

Member: Seasoned Veteran
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    rrantique reacted to Coinbuf in For the love of copper   
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    rrantique reacted to Sandon in Follow the lead picture post.   
    1884 Morgan dollar, NGC graded MS 64:


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    rrantique reacted to Just Bob in JP's New Set   
    Screenshot posted. Saved for posterity.

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    rrantique reacted to Coinbuf in Follow the lead picture post.   
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    rrantique reacted to Mike Meenderink in Post your most recent acquisition: US   
    1917 Standing Liberty T-1 25c grades F15 eBay $19.50 w /tax & free shipping value $80-$100 graded. Another one please....I've been on a raw roll lately....Love this coin's antique look. Typeset bound.......
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    1957-D  MS66RB


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    rrantique reacted to Coinbuf in Follow the lead picture post.   
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    rrantique reacted to Sandon in Follow the lead picture post.   
    1888 Liberty Seated dime in a green label PCGS holder giving a grade of "AU 53", while the PCGS database says, "PR 53". The coin has proof characteristics notwithstanding the weakness on Liberty's head, and the die variety exists in both proof (F-101) and circulation strike (F-101a) format. I bought it out of a dealer's "cheap slab" box for all of $45 in 1994.


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    rrantique reacted to Just Bob in It's Token Tuesday! Post 'em if you got 'em.   
    The previous post was about Lorenzo Batson, who was the brother of this week's subject: Randolph Batson. 
    In 1883, the two brothers built a store in Hillsdale, Mississippi, to serve the workers who were building the new roadbed for the Southern Railway. As they prospered, they began buying tracts of virgin timber. In 1893, the partnership was dissolved, and L.B moved to Millard (see previous post.) Randolph remained in Hillsdale and continued to purchase timberland, eventually owning 100,000 acres in Mississippi, and another 20,000 in Florida. In 1910, he established the Southern Lumber and Timber Company in Hillsdale, a token of which is shown in the very first post in this thread. That mill burned in 1922. In 1924, he joined with N.P. and W.H Hatten to purchase the sawmill of  the Ingram-Day Lumber Company, and with it, the sawmill town of Lyman, MS. At full capacity, the Batson & Hatten mill produced 200,000 board feet of yellow pine lumber per day, and employed 500 hands. (The town of Lyman still exists today. It is located just north of Gulfport, on Highway 49.)
    "Ran" Batson was an influential figure in southern Mississippi, and was instrumental in replanting the forests after all of the virgin timber had been cut. At the time of his death, he owned 14,000 acres which had been replanted in pines, and stocked with deer and other wildlife, along with other pieces of property throughout south Mississippi.
    The octagonal lumber company tokens are known in denominations of $.05, $.25, and $1; The round mercantile tokens are known in these denominations, plus a one cent token. No ten cent tokens are known for either.
     










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    rrantique reacted to Just Bob in It's Token Tuesday! Post 'em if you got 'em.   
    History by Gil Hoffman:
    On March 21, 1900, L. B. Batson and Henry T. McGehee bought the sawmill plant and timber holdings (amounting to 2,880 acres) of R. B. Haney at Millard, Pearl River County. This mill had been built in 1896 and was logged by oxen. For about a year Batson and McGehee operated the Haney mill as a co-partnership under the name Caledonia Lumber Company. The co-partnership was succeeded by the Batson-McGehee Company which was incorporated at Millard on September 19, 1901, by L. B. Batson, of Columbia; Henry T. McGehee, of Millard, and Nathaniel Batson, of Poplarville, with authorized capital stock of $30,000. A new circular sawmill with a cutting capacity of 50,000 feet per day was built at Millard to replace the old Haney mill. In later years this mill was changed to a band type. In the spring of 1902 a standard gauge logging railroad was constructed to log the mill. The mill finally shut down in early 1940.
    Pictured below are two of the companies Shay locomotives, with their trademark side-cylinder engines.
    Batson-McGehee No. 1 sat behind the commissary in Millard after the mill shut down, and was bought by Goodyear Yellow Pine in 1943. It is shown here in Millard about 1940.
    Batson -McGehee No 2 is pictured at the manufacturing yard in Lima, Ohio
    Tokens were issued in denominations of 5 cents through one dollar. All issues are listed as R9 (2 to 3 known.)