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Replies: 39 / Views: 4,097 |
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Valued Member
 Canada
262 Posts |
I'm willing to bet LBJ is on that list.
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Bedrock of the Community
13014 Posts |
I would pull rank for sure if people were making claims to those coins.
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Pillar of the Community
614 Posts |
The government cares just for the principle of it. If they stopped caring, it would show that they eventually give up. This shows weakness. On another note, just imagine the secret service monitoring this thread right now. :)
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Forum Dad
 United States
24180 Posts |
No where did he say anything about weighing them. He said everyone had to sign a statement that they didn't have any. That's it. Sorry but I would bet my last dollar that there are a few out there somewhere.
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Rest in Peace
United States
9104 Posts |
Quote:Silver would have gotten too pricey for the Peace dollar as well as it is exactly twice as big as the Kennedy half dollar. Actually about 7% bigger than two JFK halves.
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Rest in Peace
United States
9104 Posts |
Step one: Explain how something can exist.
Step two: After proving the possibility of existence, deny all possibility of survival.
Step three: Stay tuna-ed.
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Bedrock of the Community
United States
17884 Posts |
Quote: but they were popular in parts of the west in the early part of the 20th century from what I've read. I think if you really got into it you would find that they circulated more in certain areas of the west than other areas, but they were probably still not really that popular.
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Valued Member
 Canada
262 Posts |
Quote: Actually about 7% bigger than two JFK halves. Oh wow, that definitely wouldn't work then....  Quote: I think if you really got into it you would find that they circulated more in certain areas of the west than other areas, but they were probably still not really that popular. Nevada and Montana in particular, and if they weren't that popular: Quote: Much of the pressure for the coins to be struck was being applied by the Senate Majority Leader, Mike Mansfield (Democrat--Montana), who represented a state that heavily used silver dollars.
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Valued Member
United States
282 Posts |
My uncle who died in 1957 worked in a cinnabar (mercury)mine in Idaho or Montana during the early 50's and was paid each week with silver dollars. That was normal in that era in that part of the west. In 1983 the casinos in Nevada the dollar slots used Eisenhower dollars. I played several in Reno, Lake Tahoe and Las Vegas. Soon after that most of the casinos started using the tokens that you can still find at some casinos. The franklin mint made most of the tokens I think. I played with a few last week in Las Vegas and they were dated in the late 80's.
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Valued Member
 Canada
262 Posts |
@Gary, thank you for validating my point, and boy your uncle was tough! I'd want to be as far as possible from mercury, even mercury deposited solidly in an ore.
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Bedrock of the Community
United States
17884 Posts |
Oftentimes many western businesses would pay their workers with silver dollars to demonstrate to the local community how much the business contributed to the local economy. The question would be were the dollar coins handed back out in change so they continued to circulate, or did they go from the mine to the workers to the businesses to the bank where the mine would pick them up again for the next payroll?
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Moderator
 United States
189728 Posts |
Quote: There was some pending case about one of the double eagles the government had confiscated but dont remember how it turned out assuming its not on going. https://goccf.com/t/93647
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Pillar of the Community
United States
1590 Posts |
It wasn't just the west. There was a local factory in here in Newark Ohio that paid out in Silver dollars. This was also a B&O depot town; most of the workers preferred Silver dollars from the bank when they cashed their checks.
I have a friend who owned a Gas Station here in town from 56 till 72. He has a "treasure box" that he threw all the silver dollars in and saved them for his son. I just inventoried them for him and there are 623 silver dollars in there; which goes to show how late some of these were circulating in central Ohio.
My Grandfather also owned the Silver Spur Casino in Carson City Nv. I remember sitting on bags of Silver dollars and doing my homework in the 60s. I used to help in the counting room and pull Silver dollars out in the 70s. As I recall it was rare but not unheard of to sill find a Silver dollar or two in a winners bucket up through the verrrrrry early 80s. Gramps passed in 82; so I had no association with the Casino after that.
Buuuut believe it or not; not everyone heard of the Hunt brothers back then. And Gamblers don't care if their dollar is worth more than a dollar..especially when they could put it in a machine and make it 100 dollars!
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New Member
United States
11 Posts |
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Bedrock of the Community
13014 Posts |
64 as in the year not grade for the ones that dont exist.
But regardless of that your link was showing PCGS and NGC graded ones which are without a doubt real
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