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Is This Considered Junk Silver?

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First Page  Showing last 15 replies.
Author Previous TopicReplies: 17 / Views: 3,754Next Topic Page 2 of 2
Pillar of the Community
Canada
4227 Posts
 Posted 09/26/2014  3:15 pm  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add chequer to your friends list
I love low grade quarters. I consider them to have numismatic value.
Pillar of the Community
Canada
576 Posts
 Posted 09/26/2014  3:17 pm  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add Liverpool to your friends list
I am no expert from from where I am sitting ... no, they are not junk. If you were at a coin show and you had them out selling anywhere near junk prices I'd happily buy them in a heart beat. You have some great old coins with 100 +/- years of history.
Some of those coins may have been carried over seas during the two great wars. There is more to these coins than just their weight in silver there is also their weight in history.
In May of 1902 there were parties for Canadians returning from the Boer war. Maybe a guy bought his girl a gift with one of your coins. Coin tosses that were won and lost,............
Anyway I guess you see where I'm coming from, I do love MS coins, proofs and so on but old/ handled coins matter.
cheers,
If you have read this far, thanks
Liverpool
Edited by Liverpool
09/26/2014 3:18 pm
Pillar of the Community
Canada
2519 Posts
 Posted 09/26/2014  3:20 pm  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add Altaira to your friends list
I agree with artdio. If they're not recently cleaned/polished, they're happily used
Valued Member
Canada
220 Posts
 Posted 09/26/2014  4:42 pm  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add Islander2010 to your friends list
Mint state coins are great, but I too have a deep appreciation for the history behind a well circulated coin. Maybe I am just too much of a romantic with an overly vivid imagination! :-)
Pillar of the Community
Canada
2187 Posts
 Posted 09/26/2014  5:08 pm  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add Paulsz to your friends list
Liverpool, I know what you feel like. The reason I began collecting is because I found a 1920 penny in my change a few years back after eating at a restaurant. The history that penny might have went through got me really interested.


Thanks for the opinions guys! Much appreciated
Pillar of the Community
United States
3486 Posts
 Posted 09/26/2014  5:14 pm  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add matthewvincent to your friends list
A few 5 and 10 cent Canadian pieces found their way to southern Connecticut and I love them as they are.
Hard to sell because there are so many, as with US coins in that condition.
But definitely collectable.
Pillar of the Community
Canada
867 Posts
 Posted 09/26/2014  5:15 pm  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add tripoli to your friends list
some of those may be 90% Ag, not 80%
Pillar of the Community
United States
593 Posts
 Posted 09/26/2014  5:34 pm  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add garys64wildcat to your friends list
I guess that I appreciate the worn old coins. I have a worn slick 1797 British Cartwheel and an 1860 and 1865 Victoria farthings in XF+ that my Grandpa brought from England ( Somersetshire Co.) in 1880`s as a boy on a sailing ship and settled in Iowa and married Grandma.

She was to be a teacher and she left me a unc Buffalo 13P type 1. and several old books. 1880 Geography text and 1856 Tennyson poem book, Teddy Roosevelt token 1904, Remember the Maine token, plus many more memories.

I think of the hands that 1797 went through to be that worn. I enjoy history.
Sorry for the long post, but I sit and think when I look at my coins as some of You mention.

Pillar of the Community
710 Posts
 Posted 09/26/2014  5:44 pm  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add Alex A to your friends list
Definitely keep! The pre-1920 coins are 0.925 silver.

These type of coins are a great way for new collectors to get into the hobby.
Valued Member
United States
201 Posts
 Posted 09/26/2014  6:03 pm  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add Mraderm946 to your friends list
Well said, Liverpool.
Valued Member
Canada
413 Posts
 Posted 09/29/2014  04:22 am  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add lucv13 to your friends list
I highly doubt any of my Vickys or Edwards or any coin I own prior to 1930 is any better than VG (except my pennies) - it's what I can afford to collect and I proudly display them to friends and family - I'd love to find an O4, 05 or 32 .50 cent piece in G or VG condition for well under $100!
Edited by lucv13
09/29/2014 04:37 am
Valued Member
Germany
85 Posts
 Posted 09/29/2014  07:01 am  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add Amwyll Rwden to your friends list
I'm coming close to having a representative of each type of Cdn circulation coin, and I would gladly get some of the old silver in that condition!
Pillar of the Community
United States
593 Posts
 Posted 09/29/2014  1:33 pm  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add garys64wildcat to your friends list
I to have some some older Canadian silver and mine are also in the G to VG condition except for some 5 cent silver pieces I have had for years. I cant afford the higher grade Vickys and 20 cent piece for my Canadian Dansco type set. If I get enough posts maybe I can find someone to trade with.
Pillar of the Community
Canada
3692 Posts
 Posted 09/29/2014  7:22 pm  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add Libertad to your friends list
Any silver coins that I have bought that were cleaned or deeply scratched carry a "junky" feeling in my book. Anything VG and higher is pretty well cherished, though. That's pretty much one of the better ways for a new collector to enter into the market. The same goes for US coins - to me, I have no attachment to my "junk" silver because they are ugly and were only bought for the silver content.

90%: how?
Pillar of the Community
United States
1373 Posts
 Posted 09/29/2014  8:03 pm  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add atticguy to your friends list
I buy most of my collection of silver Canadian coins from the 'junk pile' at a nearby shop. Last week I found 6 silver nickels, 6 silver dimes, and 3 silver quarters (all Vicky's and Eddies). The nickels cost me 60-cents each, the dimes $1.20 each, and the quarters (1874, 1892, & 1900) for $3 apiece.
I don't really care if others call them 'junk' coins. I'm always very happy to get them at the bargains I pay. There were also many AU silver coins (later Elizabeth's) that I could have bought but I didn't want to pay for ones that I may have had in nice shape already. Next time I'll have to bring a list of low graded coins I have.
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