- Aug 4, 2012
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Any coin collectors here?
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I've got 64 Morgan silver dollars.Yes, mostly silver (due to the cost of gold).
I like a lot of the (virtually) pure commemorative coins (Olympics, etc). And I've recently been buying ounces of international silver coins (Australia, Canada)..
I'm a big believer in acquiring/investing in real money, as opposed to currency and/or stocks, etc.
Peace.
Maybe you should start a collection of wheat pennies, buffalo nickels, Mercury dimes, standing liberty quarters, or walking liberty halves, all early 20th century coins.I used to be. When a youngster my mom got me started on pennies... and special nickels like the buffalo. Later on as I travelled the nation, I would visit shops and buy <gasp> pennies needed... I shared with my mom, two sets, since she got me going on it. Later she would accuse me of stealing them (I left both sets with her)... but I suspect she sold them and forgot about it. She later began collecting the gold plated state quarters, and I have them now but they aren't worth what she paid for them, imo.
I still enjoy and scan any coins I get, like when travelling and getting coins in change for the laundromat. I keep any wheat pennies, and dimes that are not tainted, etc.
Yes, back in the old days, half dimes, dimes, quarters, halves, and dollars were made of 89.24% silver, I think. There probably was a reason for that.I like the Morgans.. my sole complaint being that their silver is diluted. I appreciate that a lot of contemporary silver coins are virtually pure silver now..
Another silver coin I like is the 1992 Columbus; printed in honor of the quincentinneal
of Columbus' first voyage. Same complaint tho, Columbus coin is only 90% silver..
I like the Morgans.. my sole complaint being that their silver is diluted. I appreciate that a lot of contemporary silver coins are virtually pure silver now..
Another silver coin I like is the 1992 Columbus; printed in honor of the quincentinneal
of Columbus' first voyage. Same complaint tho, Columbus coin is only 90% silver..
I just found a website that states that silver is very soft, and a small amount of copper is used to make it hard.Yes, back in the old days, half dimes, dimes, quarters, halves, and dollars were made of 89.24% silver, I think. There probably was a reason for that.
Sounds like you have a nice collection. You'd better find those silver certificates.I do have a few silver dollars, half dollars..liberty and all that. I also have some silver certificates somewhere. My SIL gave me a few uncirculated (in packages) pennies in the 60s... guess I have all this stuff together?
I'm really not interested in the state quarters, nor anything that isn't silver![]()
Not that we will be able to trade with them or anything... and surely gold will not work for that!
I don't know anything about it, but I found this:IDK those silver certificates are just the $1 bills... meaning I get a real dollar's worth when the whole system collapses?
Keep working on those wheat pennies.I've got a full state quarter set (along with D.C, Puerto Rico, Guam, and Virgin Islands),
A decent-sized wheat penny set (earliest one is from 1919),
As well as bag of foreign currencies
When I was a paper boy back in the sixties, you'd still see buffalo nickels, Mercury dimes, standing liberty quarters, walking liberty halves, and real silver dollars. Those were the days.Used to collect when I was growing up, back when wheat pennies were still common in change
Never had anything worth much money though
Perhaps so. My only question would be what condition such coins would be in.Since I live in an old town that is slowly being renovated, I've toyed with the idea of getting a metal detector to sweep the downtown streets when they have the street torn down to soil, I understand you can find some great stuff like that
Maybe you should go to a coin store and start a little collection. Be careful, though. It's easy to spend a whole lot of money really fast on coins.I understand the better condition coins found are from the areas where they had the wooden sidewalks, they'd fall through the cracks and get covered up by dust / mud, then when cement sidewalks were poured and streets paved, it buried them in whatever condition they were in when someone dropped them
Don't recall seeing any that were super nice though![]()