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Pillar of the Community
 United States
1247 Posts |
quote: Originally posted by Mike
Hey Longnine009, please let me know the results of your above trivia question. It is a tough one, because other definitions are very close to the one I found. Chasing these down is very educational and fun! My guess is in my above post. Thanks! Mike
You mentioned English Islands, which is close enough I guess. The answer on the card is Great Britan.
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Rest in Peace
United States
2884 Posts |
Thanks Longnine009, I "guess" I should have given "less" detail.(sometimes less is more!) Maybe the "British" Isles would have been more accurate! It was a tough question, as other nations later copied the term for some of their early coinage. I think you have started a fun thread! Here's my trivia question....
When did the U.S. mint institute the practice of having its coins checked annually by an ouside group? What did this group eventually become known as?
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Pillar of the Community
 United States
1247 Posts |
quote: Originally posted by Mike
When did the U.S. mint institute the practice of having its coins checked annually by an ouside group? What did this group eventually become known as?
The U.S. Assay commission. Established by the same provisions that established the U.S. Mint in 1792. Public members were authorized to serve on the commission in 1837.
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Pillar of the Community
 United States
5953 Posts |
Ok My turn which 2005 issued coin has two monarchs on it? clues will be available on a daily basis if no one gets it.
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Pillar of the Community
United States
1203 Posts |
quote: Originally posted by nohope587
Ok My turn which 2005 issued coin has two monarchs on it? clues will be available on a daily basis if no one gets it.
How about the Canadian coin with Elizabeth's likeness on one side and a Monarch Butterfly on the other. Just minted this year. Take a look; http://www.allnationsstampandcoin.c...tterfly.html
Edited by OldDan 07/01/2005 9:31 pm
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Pillar of the Community
 United States
5953 Posts |
I can see I will have to make the questions harder....
Less than an hour...
Very Well done.
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Rest in Peace
United States
2884 Posts |
Hey Longnine009, The U.S. Assay Commission is correct. The first year the the U.S. Mint had an outside commission check out its is coinage was in 1823. This group eventually became the Assay Commission, made up of private citizens whose principal duties over the years was to compare the weight of the standard pound, made and used by the mint,with the original standard pound sent over from England in 1827. Mike 
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Pillar of the Community
 United States
1247 Posts |
quote: Originally posted by nohope587
I can see I will have to make the questions harder....
Okay, what (according to Thomas Elder) was the name of Lyman Low's last dog--a white male French Poodle?
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Pillar of the Community
Australia
1091 Posts |
quote: Originally posted by longnine009
quote: Originally posted by nohope587
I can see I will have to make the questions harder....
Okay, what (according to Thomas Elder) was the name of Lyman Low's last dog--a white male French Poodle?
Wow, that's a thread stopper! Is there an answer? ...famous numismatists like Lyman Low...Born in Boston in 1844 Low, Lyman Haines â€" (1844-1924) A native of New Rochelle, New York, Low served in the Union Army during the Civil War. Low was both dealer and collector. His coins (with 400 large cents) were sold on May 1-3, 1924....He wrote a standard text on Hard Times Tokens in 1886, and served as co-editor of The American Journal of Numismatics from 1891 to 1907. Humm,it's hard to imagine what Thomas Elder THOUGHT Lyman named his LAST dog. But being that it's French I'll guess he'd name the poor dog.."Liberty".  You definitely succeeded in making the questions harder! [:p]
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Rest in Peace
United States
954 Posts |
quote: Originally posted by longnine009
There are three kinds of men in this world my friend, those who can count and those who can't count.
Sorry OldDan your figures are correct.
Gee Longnine am I the third person..? After reading the article in Coin World about the Cheerios Sakie dollar I was wondering if I should go out and buy 300 boxes just to get one? catman
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Rest in Peace
United States
954 Posts |
You gotta watch the OldDan nohope. He gets tricky when your not looking.
catman
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Pillar of the Community
 United States
1247 Posts |
quote: Originally posted by toast
quote: Originally posted by longnine009
quote: Originally posted by nohope587
I can see I will have to make the questions harder....
Okay, what (according to Thomas Elder) was the name of Lyman Low's last dog--a white male French Poodle?
Humm,it's hard to imagine what Thomas Elder THOUGHT Lyman named his LAST dog. But being that it's French I'll guess he'd name the poor dog.."Liberty". 
You definitely succeeded in making the questions harder! [:p]
He also engaged in a fist fight at an auction once with Ed Frossard, concerning some dispute over a Strawberry cent. That must've been an entertaining day!  I got the question about his dog from a footnote in my favorite Dave Bowers book--American Numismatics Before the Civil War. The footnotes in this book are almost book by themselves! But here's what Elder said in Hobbies magazine June 1936: "...Always neat and well dressed, his shoes well polished, one cannot recall Mr. Low as a man of careless or slipshod habits of life. Even his dog, Major, of whom he and his wife were very fond was a white French poodle, kept immaculately trimmed and garbed. I say garbed, for he wore the latest things in collar and harness..."
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Moderator
 United States
23537 Posts |
Trivia for the fourth of July
Now the folks down under and across the pond know this answer;
so for all the Americans celebrating the 4th of July, Who is Guy Fawkes and what does Guy Fawkes day have in common with the fourth of July.
rggoodie aka Richard "catch em doing something right"
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Rest in Peace
United States
954 Posts |
Wasn't Guy Fawkes the guy who tried to blow up both houses of parlaiment in the early 1600's..? The only thing I can think of that might be similiar would be that the people both celebrate these events by shooting off fireworks.
catman
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Rest in Peace
United States
2884 Posts |
Here's the short story....  Catman nailed it! Guido Fawkes (April 13, 1570â€"January 31, 1606), most commonly called Guy Fawkes and sometimes rendered as Faukes, who also used the pseudonym John Johnson, was a member of a group of Roman Catholic conspirators who attempted to assassinate King James I and all the members of both branches of the Parliament of England while they were assembled in the House of Lords building for the formal opening of the 1605 session of Parliament. The plot was uncovered and the barrels of gunpowder defused before any damage was done. Fawkes was a convert to Catholicism, which occurred at about the age of 16, if his admission of recusancy at his preliminary interrogation is to be believed. In the United Kingdom and in New Zealand, the failure of the gunpowder plot is celebrated annually on Guy Fawkes Night.
Edited by Mike 07/04/2005 6:51 pm
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