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centsdimes
New Member
United States
48 Posts
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I'm just an old-fashioned coin collector. I began collecting coins around 1963 when I took on a paper route and my dad introduced me to his coin collection. I wouldn't know the difference between an MS-67 and an MS-62, but I do like old coins.
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New Member
United States
48 Posts |
When I was a boy I collected Mercury dimes and silver dollars. They were still in circulation, though there weren't many silver dollars left in my little city. Every Saturday I'd go to the bank and see if they had any new ones in. Once I got scolded by one of the tellers for this.
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Pillar Of The Community
United States
612 Posts |
Always nice to have a collector from the time of silver. :)
View my collection: http://omnicoin.com/collection/tzarmarko Current Projects: MAIN: Silver and Gold coins from 1900-1920. SUB: German Marks from 1891-1916
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New Member
United States
48 Posts |
I inherited a few old foreign coins from my mother a couple of years ago that look like those.
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New Member
United States
48 Posts |
In the 1960s there was no eBay, internet, or personal computers. I ordered three Morgan silver dollars from an ad in a magazine, though.
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Pillar Of The Community
United States
2876 Posts |
I too am an old fashioned collector. Still like to buy raw coins and fill album holes with them.
In the early 1980's when the MS grading system started to take over the U.S. market, I switched to foreign coins and dumped all my U.S.. Over the years I decided to learn the MS grading system and went back to U.S.. The problem I'm seeing now is the MS grades seem to be changing at the third party graders. They tend to be much looser on the grading as time goes on and what use to be MS-65 now becomes MS-66 and 67. Guess it's all about the mighty buck.
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New Member
United States
38 Posts |
I started in the 50`s with my paper route and a customer kept going through my change and that got me started. I found alot of key and semi keys off my route. US and Canadian both. I wish I would have kept my 37d 3 legged buffalo nickle. plus all the silver. But a divorce didnt help any. But I managed to save some. Now I`m a casual collector. The prices of key dates really went up
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Pillar Of The Community
United States
2221 Posts |
your old fashioned but still enjoy coins! :)
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New Member
United States
48 Posts |
I had to sell my silver dollars in 1980 so I could afford to move. The price of silver had sky-rocketed, so I got a good deal. Now I have my Mercury dimes, my dad's Indian head cents, and my mother's large cents.
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Valued Member
United States
307 Posts |
Quote: When I was a boy I collected Mercury dimes and silver dollars. They were still in circulation, though there weren't many silver dollars left in my little city. Every Saturday I'd go to the bank and see if they had any new ones in. Once I got scolded by one of the tellers for this. IMO, that is awful that someone would think it their place to scold you for a legit request like that!  I sometimes look back on how rude and mean some adults were to us as kids at times, and would love to have them try that garbage on me NOW. I always keep it in mind when dealing with all kids/youngsters! No excuses for that, IMO. Unless you were a rude brat, they should have smiled and said thank you each and every week! IMO, nothing wrong with collectors buying/selling rolls to banks. Now if I were a bank employee, what I'd object to is those yahoos that were scamming for airline miles by buying Susan B dollars via airline miles cc's, s&h free, and then cashing them in at their banks THOUSANDS at a time. I'd have refused to buy them back if it were me. They should have been the ones "scolded"! 
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Pillar Of The Community
United States
890 Posts |
I also started collecting in the mid 1950's when I was 10 years old. My Dad's pocket change was my resource. I was allowed to keep the old Lincolns and started a Whitman album of Mercury dimes that I still have. The 1916D is still empty but I made a note in the album 'nice one costs $90'.
I wish I could have kept some of the walking halfs as so many great ones were in circulation but my Dad was earning about $2 an hour in his factory job and 50 cents wasn't a trivial amount at the time.
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Valued Member
United States
375 Posts |
cipster - I started out when you did, in the mid 50's, before TPGs. I still remember getting an Indian Head cent in change once in a while, and Buffalo nickels, Mercs, SLQs and Walkers were still pretty common. I was only able to put away a few Walkers as 50C was (as you said) a good bit of money in those days.
I still have my Mercs, and was able to get a 1916 & 1916-S out of circulation, but unfortunately no 16-D.
Edited by mackwork 06/14/2012 4:10 pm
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Pillar Of The Community
Canada
1381 Posts |
Quote:Quote: When I was a boy I collected Mercury dimes and silver dollars. They were still in circulation, though there weren't many silver dollars left in my little city. Every Saturday I'd go to the bank and see if they had any new ones in. Once I got scolded by one of the tellers for this. IMO, that is awful that someone would think it their place to scold you for a legit request like that! I sometimes look back on how rude and mean some adults were to us as kids at times, and would love to have them try that garbage on me NOW. I always keep it in mind when dealing with all kids/youngsters! No excuses for that, IMO. Unless you were a rude brat, they should have smiled and said thank you each and every week! I agree BuffalosRock... The worst part of that is it still happens now... just read what has been posted in the 'Is coin collecting harder for a YN?' thread. To quote myself; "A dealer raised the price on an object when I was alone and dropped it when my father came."
Young Numismatist with an ancestor on the Mayflower! Attributed Roman Coins: 2 Attributed Greek Coins: 1
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Valued Member
United States
227 Posts |
Yeah, I was just gonna say in response to BuffalosRock that this is what we were talking about over there in the YN thread. Its nice to hear that there are people who recognize it and keep it in mind.
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Pillar Of The Community
United States
1492 Posts |
yea my dad kinda said the same thing to me cipster, 50 cents was a big deal back in the 1950s couldnt save those when people earned around 1 to 2 bucks an hr - no wonder so few people saved halves back then
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Pillar Of The Community
United States
3294 Posts |
Not a problem here. When I started collecting 3 years ago, $.50 was only 14% of one hour of minimum wage.
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