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Replies: 28 / Views: 3,449 |
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Moderator
  United States
56855 Posts |
Broken-Coin, If I remember right didn't you get your user name when one of your kids looked at one of your error coins and called it a "Broken Coin"? That coin would be sentimental to me if I was in your shoes. If you still have that coin I would add it to the currency and keep it too. IMHO of course. John1 
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Pillar of the Community
United States
4085 Posts |
Mine's an 1857-O Seated dime my Grandfather gave me in 1973; he passed away shortly after that.
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Pillar of the Community
United States
3540 Posts |
Family, History, and Coins.....amazing how all three share a part in these stories.
Thanks to all for sharing.
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Pillar of the Community
United States
1812 Posts |
@ John1 Your correct, when my granddaughter came to visit, I was in the middle of going through my errors with hundreds of multi-strikes & overdates (both USA & World) and I don't remember exactly what coin I handed her to view, but she was very excited when she said "this coin is broken" followed by "WOW grandpa, look at all the broken coins" ~ (she was sitting on the floor surrounded by coins)... She is 7 now and I'll ask her if she remembers what coin it was... Thanks for the idea, and if she does remember it will be set aside for her.
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Pillar of the Community
United States
620 Posts |
I belong to quite fes coin sites. And have made some very good friends. The coins that meen the most to me have been sent as RAOK from fiends I have made. Stands for Random Act of Kindness. One of my good friends passed away and the coins we traded and ones he gave me will never leave my collection. Also have some crisp $2.00 bills my mother gave me about 50 years ago. These meen a lot also.
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Valued Member
United States
96 Posts |
I decided to do my first box of nickels. I dig into my first roll and find a dateless Buffalo nickel. I plan to drill a hole in it and put it on my key chain. Mack
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Rest in Peace
United States
10625 Posts |
I have a coin, well make that had a coin that belonged to my grandmother. I inherited it from her when she passed on and just recently gave it to my daughter. It's a 1922 Peace dollar that was turned in to a broach.
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Valued Member
United States
157 Posts |
I have approx. 50% of my collection meaning something more than just coins to me....they were inherited from my father during his years of Alzheimer's prior to his passing. They will be kept in the family forever.....nothing of real value, however priceless to me.
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Pillar of the Community
Russian Federation
5176 Posts |
A Soviet 20 copecks 1932. I got it (if I remember correctly) around 2001 (so I was approximately nine back then)... to be exact, I noticed a strange circular piece of dirt on one of the tables, and just happened to recognize the (barely visible) coin design from a mathematical book set in the early 1930s which I really liked back then (it's by Yakov Perelman; I've since started to like his other books much more). My "collection" had, for the next several years (until late 2010), been in constant turnover between me, my father, and being misplaced (a lot of the misplaced part was probably never recovered when we moved in 2006); I can think of maybe half a dozen more coins that I probably had since 2004 or earlier, but most of them are pretty literally nothing to be proud of (the main exception being the Mongolian 2 mongo 1959 piece, which still gets at most second place because it doesn't have such a funny backstory). Oh, and the way that 20 copeck got so dirty (it's literally almost black, and the date is only visible at some angles)? Apparently it was a botched cleaning attempt by my father. So there's why it's bad to clean coins 
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Pillar of the Community
United States
974 Posts |
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Pillar of the Community
United States
1227 Posts |
My F/XF 1908 IHC. There's a story here. When I was seven years old, my sister (who is half-Native American) received a beautiful 1878 IHC for Christmas--1878 being 100 years before her birth. I idolized my big sis, and dreamed of being a pretty Indian princess like she was (nobody had explained to me yet that not all Native American women were princesses)--and so was extremely jealous of that coin. One of my cousins noticed and was totally charmed--so he picked up a 1908 IHC for me for my birthday, "from oh-eight because you're eight". That coin sat on my dresser, revered and oohed and aahed over, for three weeks. Then someone broke into our home. We lost over $2000 worth of stuff--VHS tapes (this was in the days before DVDs), CDs, my mother's cassette collection (these were also still a thing), a selection from our Nintendo and Super Nintendo games . . . and, from my room, three things. A stack containing all three cassette tapes I owned--two of which I had just gotten for my birthday. A collector's Barbie, also for my birthday, still in her box. And my precious Indian Princess coin. You can imagine the rage and tears for yourself; most of my birthday presents were gone, and all of them were things I'd really, really wanted. I angrily refused offers to replace them (I regret to say that when someone bought me a copy of one of the cassette tapes, I actually smashed it out of anger and didn't own another copy of it until I was 13) and for many years didn't even think about collecting. Then I started working at Circle K. And one day I broke open a roll of pennies, and guess what came spilling out . . . . . . I swear it's the same one I lost. It's in the same general condition and while there are no nice neat identifying marks, something in my heart--even if it's just the hopeless-romantic part of me--says that this is the coin that was taken from me, and that it spent the last 15 years slowly traveling across the country, finding its way back home. And that is why someday I will be rich and famous and have a complete set of IHC in AU or better, except for my 1908. She has a home, and she's staying in it, for keeps.
Edited by ninamason 11/05/2012 02:38 am
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Pillar of the Community
Philippines
1156 Posts |
a 1903-O BU Morgan dollar coin, given to me by my dad, he made a trip to hawaii in 1962 & bought it there sentimental because it was my first coin and my first lost coin too. Got turned into a silver ring in 1972 during my vacation from home LoL
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Pillar of the Community
Canada
2781 Posts |
when my grandpa died each of the grandchildren (9 of us) got an ice cream pail FULL of misc change (he was a bit of a hoarder). I cleaned the pennies and cashed in the silver (at $3 an oz).
last year I found a rare mint error (in circulation), sold it and bought back all the stuff that I 'gave away' as a teenager, and started a world type set.
my favorite coin? ALL OF THEM
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Moderator
 United States
189340 Posts |
Quote: ... this is the coin that was taken from me, and that it spent the last 15 years slowly traveling across the country, finding its way back home. I prefer this ending to that story. 
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Pillar of the Community
United States
950 Posts |
I don't have a great story about it, but my great grandfather had an 1853 Half Dime that he left to me when he died. I was just 9(?) when he died so my mother held onto it until last year. At 25 I guess she thought I was old enough to understand how special it was, so she gave it to me. I also have a 1918 (maybe S mint, but I cant be sure)Mercury dime and a box of Ikes from him.
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Replies: 28 / Views: 3,449 |
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