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Silver Coins Melted At The Mint, 1968-1970.

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 Posted 05/25/2023  1:46 pm Show Profile   Bookmark this topic Add BStrauss3 to your friends list Get a Link to this Message
Found this by accident,
1970 Mint Director's Report: https://nnp.wustl.edu/library/book/350



Quote:
Silver
The Bureau of the Mint recovered approximately 50 million ounces of silver during the fiscal year from melting silver quarters and dimes which had been separated from inventories of coins by the Federal Reserve banks. A total of 212.3 million ounces of silver was recovered through the coin melting program from its initiation in March 1968 through June 30, 1970. During the 3 fiscal years a total of 563,882,690 quarters and 1,552,903,056 dimes were melted to yield this quantity of silver.


-----Burton
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 Posted 05/25/2023  1:50 pm  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add Coinfrog to your friends list Get a Link to this Reply
Wow, very interesting!
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 Posted 05/25/2023  2:16 pm  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add Joshu - a to your friends list Get a Link to this Reply
212.3 million ounces divided by 16 divided again by 2000 makes about 6,634 tons of silver. About the size of the pile on the left.
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 Posted 05/25/2023  3:09 pm  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add jbuck to your friends list Get a Link to this Reply

Quote:
So now lets talk about the 'survival rate' of some of the old silver coins.
Indeed.
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 Posted 05/25/2023  4:45 pm  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add nickelsearcher to your friends list Get a Link to this Reply
Wow - that is a lot!
Take a look at my other hobby ... http://www.jk-dk.art
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 Posted 05/25/2023  7:10 pm  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add hvacfreak to your friends list Get a Link to this Reply
Never thought about it till now , I wonder how many rare CC and O mint coins I have melted into refrigeration piping connections , lol.
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 Posted 05/25/2023  8:35 pm  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add BStrauss3 to your friends list Get a Link to this Reply
1971 does not give #s, just that


Quote:
Silver
The program of separating, melting, and .selling silver coins withdrawn from circulation was completed early in the fiscal year.
-----Burton
49 year / Life ANA member (joined 12/1/1973)
Life member: Numismatics International, CONECA
Member: TNA, FtWCC, NETCC, OnLine Coin Club
Owned by four cats and a wife of 39 years (joined 1983)

PS: ANA's records are messed up, they show me as a 50-year member and I'm now Emeritus
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 Posted 05/25/2023  8:53 pm  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add BStrauss3 to your friends list Get a Link to this Reply
That melt is 24% of all Roosevelt dime produced 1946-1964 or 17% of all Mercury+Roosevelt (1916-1964).
-----Burton
49 year / Life ANA member (joined 12/1/1973)
Life member: Numismatics International, CONECA
Member: TNA, FtWCC, NETCC, OnLine Coin Club
Owned by four cats and a wife of 39 years (joined 1983)

PS: ANA's records are messed up, they show me as a 50-year member and I'm now Emeritus
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 Posted 05/25/2023  11:02 pm  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add nick10 to your friends list Get a Link to this Reply
I'd like to know how they separated out the silver.
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 Posted 05/26/2023  09:38 am  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add Brandmeister to your friends list Get a Link to this Reply
Might have been separated by mass (about 10% higher), or electrical properties. By the late 1960s a huge Coinstar-style separator was certainly technologically possible.
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 Posted 05/26/2023  10:06 am  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add cladking to your friends list Get a Link to this Reply
My understanding is that each Fed district created their own machines. There were almost certainly some of these separators at contractors that were already counting and rolling coins for the FED even in those days. Most of the machines rolled coins down an incline and those which went a little further were the silver coins.

Remember most of the clads had to go through these machines multiple times as they were released and again mixed with silver coin.

The FED was removing these coins even as the government was saying they expected clad and silver to circulate side by side forever. At the time there were still brand new silver coins being released that had gotten lost in warehouses since this was before the days that they rotated their coin stocks. The percentage of silver in circulation had been dropping since late-'65 but it just plummeted after mid-'68. I should have suspected it was the FED but ascribed the drop to rising silver prices instead. It went very quickly and highlights just how short a time most coins sat out of circulation. In those days very few people could afford to hoard more than a couple years worth of coins and most people tried to spend their coins. Even today very few coins sit out of circulation for more than four years and the FED rotates the oldest coins out of storage first causing the clads to wear evenly since 1972.

In the '50's it was common to find old quarters in AU. Today older coins are heavily worn or already lost forever.
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Edited by cladking
05/26/2023 10:07 am
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 Posted 05/26/2023  10:14 am  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add cladking to your friends list Get a Link to this Reply
It might also be noted that the silver pulled out of circulation were the dregs. Everything coin of any interest at all had been pulled out by collectors. Even cents and nickels were picked over. Even by 1965 there were no more Buffalo nickels with dates except a few culls. Silver was worn out LS quarters and late date Washingtons. Every merc over VF was gone and only common dates remaining. The rest were all 1958 to '64. Half dollars wee little better. War Nickels still circulated a little but these weren't pulled.

Seen in this light the FED action had little effect on the availability of numismatic coins. Compared to total mintages it involved very little attrition except on common late dates.
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 Posted 05/26/2023  11:47 am  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add Brandmeister to your friends list Get a Link to this Reply
Any guess on how much silver was pulled out of circulation by ordinary folks in 1965?

I have a few dime rolls from my grandfather. Some are weathered culls from circulation, no doubt over many years. But there are quite a number of 1964 silver dimes with mirror finishes and not a scratch on them. My guess is that he got them at the bank in 1965 and put them straight into a tube. I assume many, many other people did the same thing. Those Great Depression kids had an eagle eye for value.
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