| Author |
Replies: 34 / Views: 5,363 |
|
|
|
Pillar of the Community
United States
624 Posts |
My Dad was a modest collector. He drove a NYC bus in the 60's and brought home large quantities of coins to sort. It was the first thing I ever remember doing with my Dad and many of my current collection is still from that time.
|
|
Pillar of the Community
United States
2203 Posts |
It was an ad found in a lot of comic books during the mid-late 1960s: "The 1804 dollar: 19,500 minted, only 12 known--where are the rest?" And then it gave the value--in many dollars. So when my parents showed me a box of old coins, I was positive I'd find one in there and be able to use the money to buy G.I. Joe toys. Well, I didn't find any 1804 dollars. But they also had a Red Book, and the idea of the pennies I used to buy candy with having a value of more than one cent fascinated me. I pored through that book and delighted in seeing photographs of coins in the book that were the same as my pocket change. Then one week in 1972 I was sick from school and I used that time to really get to know the Red Book. And that was the real beginning.
|
|
Bedrock of the Community
Australia
21786 Posts |
1951 Jubilee Two Bob. I was seven years old at the time. This answer may appear to be a bit cryptic to some of my American friends.
|
|
New Member
United States
33 Posts |
My story starts as a pre-teen. My first passion was stamps when I was but 8 years old. Then as an 11 year old I visited India and wow I could collect foreign coins without having to "buy" them. Although my stamps were always the number one thing in my life it was exciting after that to get a few foreign coins from my grandparents as they travelled to many different countries. Many years later the State Quarters were a challenge I couldn't turn down. A trip to Honduras and collecting more foreign coins from the wild helped. Then I went to China and my stamp collecting has almost come to a complete stop. With the need to collect something, anything I have become more serious about coins. Now I look for Chinese coins and currency. I also ask many of the other foreigners I meet for coins and currency from their countries. I know modern world coins aren't worth much to many collectors but they are valuable to me 'cause thats what I like.
|
|
Moderator
 United States
188213 Posts |
|
|
Valued Member
United States
71 Posts |
Had a customer pay in coins ... checked values ... hooked!
|
|
Pillar of the Community
United Kingdom
548 Posts |
I bought my first silver coin in 2011, a Silver Eagle. Since then I've started a collection of silver bullion coins. No duplicates.
|
|
Valued Member
United States
449 Posts |
being a cashier in h.s and seeing wheats pass by I started saving them. then the start of the State Quarters, I would pull new ones out of rolls when I would cashier. but what really got me into it was the ATB's after ten years of going dormat.
|
|
Pillar of the Community
United States
556 Posts |
Finding wheat pennies in my change not too long after moving to the United States. I was about 7 or 8. Thought that old wheat pennies were like the greatest thing since sliced bread, and got hooked on collecting. My interests died down after a few years, and now I'm back to collecting! 
|
|
Pillar of the Community
United States
1109 Posts |
 This coin started it for me. The 1919 Lincoln Wheat cent. I was about 8-9 years old and in my grandmother's kitchen. She used to go to Las Vegas several times a year and always kept a cup of change to take with her for playing slots when she'd go. In one such cup, I found a bunch of wheat cents. I looked through them out of curiosity. When I found this 1919, I just KNEW it had to be the oldest thing ever made. I kept it, and decided to try to get one of each year (not worried about the mint marks back then). I made a date set of wheats, mixed mints, from 1940-1958. I have since upgraded my set to BU, but this one will always have a special place in my collection.
|
|
Valued Member
United States
102 Posts |
It was Kathy M. circa 1988. I was in the Coast Guard and she was in the bar .  Wrong bug! Mmmmmuuuuuuaaaaahhhhhhh!!]  I remember there was a Mercury dime always sat on my grandparents kitchen table.
|
|
Pillar of the Community
United States
917 Posts |
I had collected sporadically since the age of nine-I collected the 50 State Quarters, found a Wheat cent in circulation, my mother gave me an Ike, a silver quarter, and I found a 1942 Merc on the cafeteria floor in middle school (covered in ketchup, no less). What really set me off was a dateless Buffalo I received in change in 2010. It was the shot in the arm that opened my eyes to the world of collecting and I spent the next three years assembling sets of circulation strikes for my favorite series. Some of the sets are partial because I decided to focus on say, the 1930's instead of the whole series of Mercs and Walkers, but that nickel has led to an adventure for me.
|
|
New Member
United States
14 Posts |
No one in my family collects coins so this is a new endeavor for my family name. I got the bug from a former bank teller neighbor who told me about CRH. Did some research on Kennedy half hunting and I have been hooked ever since. I hunt Kennedy's and Jefferson's weekly now.
|
|
Valued Member
United States
331 Posts |
The first hand full of Morgans did it for me.
|
|
Valued Member
United States
157 Posts |
In the late 80's, when I was a pre-teen, my great aunt gave me her modest collection of coins she kept in Whitman folders. The only thing of any significant value (i.e., greater than $10) were two Indian cents: an 1867 (G4) and an 1871 (G4, pitting). Nonetheless, I was taken by seeing a cent with something other than Lincoln's profile and amazed by two coins more than 100 years older than I was. After combing through circulation to try to fill up the Whitmans, I stopped after a year or so because of teenage distractions (video games), and Aunt Mary's coin collection went into the closet. Two years ago, when cleaning out closets, I came upon the collection, was again mesmerized, and really began collecting in earnest (having more money now than I did as a 12 year old certainly helps). I may buy some pricey pieces from time to time in putting together sets, but those 1864 and 1871 Indian cents will always stay with me.
|
| |
Replies: 34 / Views: 5,363 |