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Replies: 25 / Views: 4,262 |
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Rest in Peace
United States
9104 Posts |
Quote: (64-70) I keep all 1971's since these are one of the key dates in the run. Don't wanna tip yer ship, but 71s are ridiculously common. It's the 70s that are hard, since they made none for circulation.
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Valued Member
 United States
362 Posts |
Well I am glad I am not alone. Actually with the voices in my head I'm never alone! 
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Valued Member
United States
337 Posts |
I have "junk" in my dansco albums I try to keep my buying down as much as possible on coins so I find everything I can my Roosevelt dime set that I am working on is probably 50% junk to most people's collections
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New Member
United States
28 Posts |
I save all of my "junk" for exactly the reason you stated...I love to think of what that coin has seen and where it's been in it's life. I started collecting when I was a kid in 1972, predominately because a girl I went to school with had got into her Grandfather's trunk of silver dollars and she was giving them out to her friends...It's a '21 Morgan, but still my favorite coin as it is the one that got this passion for our hobby started in me.
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Rest in Peace
United States
9104 Posts |
Quote:my Roosevelt dime set that I am working on is probably 50% junk to most people's collections famous saying, "90% of everything is junk."
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Pillar of the Community
United States
584 Posts |
One mans Junk is another mans Gold :-)Couldn't resist. I started with bags of silver coins. All pre 64 US coins. About 7-8oz a bag. Always a nice Morgan dollar inside. I'd sit their for hrs looking up the coin then reading about it. Then Try and find something hopefully some one missed. I got my first MS Morgan this way. Heck half of them are in Mylar/CB holders. Id practice writing the coin and description. It had to be perfect. I swear on more than a few of them I think I threw out more holders than the coin was worth that ended up in their. All cause my hand would shake or a line would come out funny. I love looking through them. Keeps that hunger alive. I think theirs Junkers in my DNA lol I can see the comments already on that one, lol A fellow Junker here and forever. I respect what reupman did and admit I fight that temtation all the time. Reup would love to see a pic. of that 1909 s vdb.
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Pillar of the Community
United States
3283 Posts |
Always a thrill to see a 1909s vdb and if I had a bunch of extra silver I'd trade too. As with many here most of my sets contain what many would call junk, I proundy call them my coin collection.
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Pillar of the Community
United States
2734 Posts |
I've been saving junk silver coins since 1982.  I did part with one of them. I gave away a 1963-D Franklin half dollar as the prize in my DNA's 1100-post contest.  I've also bought a lot of modern (1992+) Silver Proof Sets at melt value for bullion. Even the humblest junk silver coin has "history" that Silver Proofs do not, which is why I'd sell my junk silver last, after I sold my bars, rounds, ASE's and Proofs (in that order!).
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Pillar of the Community
United States
594 Posts |
With the price of silver what it is, just about my entire Mercury dime collection is now considered junk. So, I would have to say that, yes I save for history's sake.
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Valued Member
 United States
362 Posts |
Well I saved a whole roll of UNC 1955 roosies several rolls of Buffalo nickles, mercs and Barber dimes. Plus I kept what I thought were the best of all the ones I was selling. Just felt I had to save some for future collectors. Just nothing like holding a coin that has been through so much and makes me think who last used it as pocket change, who used it when it was new, where had it been? Just gives me a tingle every time. It's almost like a time machine.
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Replies: 25 / Views: 4,262 |