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Replies: 16 / Views: 454 |
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Pillar of the Community
United States
787 Posts |
HI all I am curious about something... Recently I have noticed what appear to be mint 1961 pennies in the tip jar of my local Dunkin Donuts (Boston area). At first I thought someone broke into an old collection they inherited, or maybe turned a roll into a local bank. BUT this has been happening for at least a month now, and sometimes the pennies are coming right out of the cash register. I wonder... since the government stopped minting pennies, are these unused ones coming from the Mint itself? Is that even remotely possible, like maybe they have a stockpile in storage? Thoughts? (I have kept a few in the car and will try to remember to post some pics of them) Edited by Nells250 06/26/2026 6:06 pm
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Pillar of the Community
 United States
787 Posts |
I thought I kept more of the pennies in question. I also didn't realize there are 1961 and 1962 years showing up. Quick pics...  
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Pillar of the Community
United States
1208 Posts |
Wow, neat!
That is certainly an anomaly in my opinion... perhaps it was a local dump and your local franchise and those customers use the same bank? Interesting!
It would be an interesting experiment to mark some zincolns, roll them, deposit or cash them at the bank and see if any come back...
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Moderator
 United States
97685 Posts |
very nice 
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Pillar of the Community
United States
3219 Posts |
Wow! Being born in 61 that's pretty darn cool.
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Pillar of the Community
United States
2273 Posts |
An individual is doing this. And he's down to releasing some really nice coins. People get tired of holding onto these and release the lowest quality they have left.
Many millions of these were saved and are still being released but these coins are top notch. Who knows how many are left but it is likely a lot. Most look awful.
Time don't fly, it bounds and leaps.
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Bedrock of the Community
United States
74846 Posts |
Pretty cool finds.  Maybe some kind of collection or change jar dump?
Errers and Varietys.
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Moderator
 United States
15489 Posts |
I'm thinking this is an individual doing a hoard dump over time. They are fun to look at for 60+ year old coins, but not much in value.
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Pillar of the Community
 United States
8795 Posts |
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Bedrock of the Community
United States
19968 Posts |
Good chance to attempt a full date roll!
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Pillar of the Community
 United States
787 Posts |
I know they probably have no value, but as just a casual collector, just seeing an old copper penny with the original finish is cool enough! :-) I'm not really into looking for varieties, as usually any standard coin I find is too worn to see them, but maybe I'll look closer at these, as a sort of lesson.
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Pillar of the Community
 United States
8795 Posts |
Quote: maybe I'll look closer at these, as a sort of lesson If you have any questions, just post on the US Modern Variety and Error Coins forum.  LINK https://goccf.com/f/5
-makecents-
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Moderator
 Australia
16857 Posts |
Quote: I wonder... since the government stopped minting pennies, are these unused ones coming from the Mint itself? Is that even remotely possible, like maybe they have a stockpile in storage?
No. If the Mint had giant stockpiles of old pennies sitting around since the 1960s, they would have released them decades ago, rather than mint more. The Mint itself doesn't really have a lot of "storage" for coins to hide in - they tend to get shipped as soon as they are produced. Likewise the Federal Reserve, which is the organization that distributes coins from mints to banks, doesn't have giant stockpiles of old coins sitting around "just in case". They wouldn't have wasted everybody's time requesting extra coins be made if they already had plenty in stock. Distributing money is their job, if they had it, they'd have distributed it, decades ago. In 1973, there was a "penny shortage", when surging copper prices caused the Mint to stop producing pennies. This is the same copper price surge that prompted the aluminium penny experiment in 1974. But people then, as now, had "run out of pennies" with some stores issuing penny scrip as substitutes. If anyone in the Mint or Fed had a ready cache of pennies sitting around from 1961, they'd probably have come out then, and not waited until now. Finally, that this wasn't a "mint release" is demonstrated by the mixture of mintmarks in your mini-hoard. Freshly minted coins are almost always homogeneously single-mintmark, and not a mixture of both mintmarks. The only people who are likely to have large stockpiles of mint-fresh coins from both mintmarks are collectors and hoarders.
Don't say "infinitely" when you mean "very"; otherwise, you'll have no word left when you want to talk about something really infinite. - C. S. Lewis
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Pillar of the Community
United States
2214 Posts |
Quote: No. If the Mint had giant stockpiles of old pennies sitting around since the 1960s, they would have released them decades ago, rather than mint more. The Mint itself doesn't really have a lot of "storage" for coins to hide in - they tend to get shipped as soon as they are produced. Thanks, Sap... that's the answer we were looking for.
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Pillar of the Community
United States
999 Posts |
I had purchased several hundred dollars of Canadian pennies a few years back. I searched thru them over time and had over $200 worth of zinc pennies I had no use for. Since no one else wanted them I cashed them in at a couple local CoinStars.
Over the next year I did notice getting back more Canadian pennies in change around the area than normal. Whether any were from my dump or not I cannot say for sure but was it coincidence?
I don't know how CoinStar deals with collected coins once they end up in their hands but I have to think they have some sort of regional processing center here in the Phoenix area and resells their coins locally. Since Canadian zinc pennies are mechanically indistinguishable from US pennies they would just be mixed in together. Assuming that the coins were redistributed locally, it makes sense that a somewhat significant amount of Canadian pennies would be in local circulation.
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Moderator
 United States
189502 Posts |
Very interesting finds!  Sap offers great information as well. 
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Replies: 16 / Views: 454 |