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Replies: 26 / Views: 2,197 |
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Pillar of the Community
United States
2200 Posts |
Is there a numismatic event in your lifetime that you can call particularly memorable? What are your memories of it?
Probably the most important numismatic event in my lifetime was the switch to clad coinage in 1965. Of course, I was only six years old and had not yet begun to collect coins, so it had no meaning to me.
I guess the first memorable one for me was the bicentennial coinage in 1975. It was the first time since I'd been collecting that some designs were changed. I'm a fan of the space program so I was excited to see a full version of the moon on the back of the dollar coin. (I found the other two new designs kind of meh.)
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Pillar of the Community
United States
1653 Posts |
Clad coinage. I was just a wee lad, and spent the next decade picking silver out of my change. Today, I think I own less than 100 post-1964 coins.
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Pillar of the Community
 United States
7174 Posts |
1969. I had been "collecting" coins for a couple of years, that was the year they changed the master dies. I was looking through some new rolls and came across one that didn't have IN GOD on it. I found a few in the rolls with some letters missing. At 14 I thought I had discovered the next 55 doubled die. The older members of my coin club straightened me out at the next meeting. That started me out on the errors and varieties path, which I was on and off till about 2010 when I went full time. I still have that "atheist cent' along with the other greasers.
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Moderator
 United States
187446 Posts |
I remember when the SBA came out and replaced my beloved Ike.  I also remember the switch to Zincolns. I think I handled the IKE > SBA change better. 
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Bedrock of the Community
United States
19108 Posts |
My moment was emptying my parents old piggy bank long, long ago. It was about the size of a soccer ball, and about 3/4 full of coins--from quarters to cents. Mercury dimes, wheat cents and more wheat cents, Buffalo nickels aplenty, a number of Standing Liberty quarters. Newer material was represented, but not in great numbers. This was back in the days of Steve Canyon and Sea Hunt...
Edited by ijn1944 10/03/2023 5:24 pm
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Moderator
 Australia
16805 Posts |
Since we're in the Modern US forum, the only think I can contribute here is my recollection of my visit to America as a 10 year old in 1983. Apparently I was quite precocious in asking people for any unusual coins they might have. I certainly seem to have more than my fair share of half dollars, Ikes and SBAs in my collection from that time period.
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
5177 Posts |
The switch from national currencies in Europe to the Euro? If I correctly remember, I wasn't thrilled. I thought the Euro looked fake (I still think it closer to monopoly money than any other currency on the planet). But then again, it is quite handy when traveling. No more exchanging "worthless" Belgian francs to Guldens when returning from a wild night in Antwerp! 
Edited by NumisEd 10/03/2023 8:48 pm
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Moderator
 United States
94636 Posts |
For me it was Discovering that the American Silver (and Gold) Eagles existed.
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Pillar of the Community
United States
7273 Posts |
I can't say any specific moment would classify as a major event. There have been many small events though. I guess you can say when I came to the U.S. and a neighbor gave me some old U.S. coins (IHC, Bison nickels, Mercury dimes, Ike's) got me into U.S. coins. But I have lots of fun memories like finishing the 1940 to 1974 Lincoln set or going to the Whitman coin show or getting my first large note.
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Pillar of the Community
United States
7613 Posts |
1959 when I was in the 3rd grade they switched from Wheat back cents to the Memorial back cents. I think it was in the Springtime of that year when I saw my first Memorial cent. That was the 1st time a major coin change occurred in my lifetime. Changes in design and metals has occurred a bunch of times in the past 64 years. Just like clockwork!
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Bedrock of the Community
Australia
21786 Posts |
Not modern US coins, but since this is about a numismatic lifetime experience, perhaps this is worth posting here, anyway. In 1971, I was living and working in Manchester, UK for two years. At that time, I already had a small but growing collection of Roman coins, which included an aureus of Claudius, a solidus of Constantius 11, and a sestertius of Nero, back in Australia. I wrote to the British Museum Coins and Medals Department, asking to review some of the Roman Collection. They wrote back to me, with an appointment about 6 weeks into the future, to view that part of the collection. I duly arrived in London on time, with my letter of appointment, and was ushered into the secure viewing area, used by research students. I saw tray after tray of Roman aurei, of the two Emperors I was then interested in, those of Augustus and Claudius. Even though it was a long time ago, it still feels like yesterday, due to my strong and ongoing interest in ancient coins. The British Museum also a lot of highly historic coins relating to early Australian coinage history. Sitting in the palm of my hand was Port Philip Gold Pattern Two Ounce (£8), of 1853, of which only two exist, - that example, and the other in the State Museum of South Australia. The British Museum example is illustrated in 'Rennicks Australian Coin and Banknote Values'.
Edited by sel_69l 10/04/2023 01:08 am
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Pillar of the Community
 United States
5765 Posts |
Having grown up on the Space Coast of Florida, it was particularly interesting when they came out with the round Moon Landing memorial coin with the convex shape to it. It had a special meaning since my mother worked at the Kennedy Space Center as the lead secretary in the "war room" at the KSC during the actual moon launches and passed away in 2015. As kids, we got to see every launch from the front porch of an old 1894 home across the Indian River from the launch pad. Let's just say the windows may have rattled a little. The other two memorable events would be the change to clad coinage which happened when I was 7. But silver didn't hold a candle to the latest 10c comic that was always coming out, which my brother and I had to get. (I've never compared to see which would have been the better "investment". LOL) Zinc cents and the switch to the single squeeze era have produced significant interest for me as well. 
Words of encouragement are one of the major food groups. We need to consume them regularly to thrive and grow.
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Pillar of the Community
 United States
2200 Posts |
Quote: The other two memorable events would be the change to clad coinage which happened when I was 7. But silver didn't hold a candle to the latest 10c comic that was always coming out, which my brother and I had to get. (I've never compared to see which would have been the better "investment". LOL) I can relate. Back then coins were for buying comic books, gum and candy.
Edited by jpsned 10/05/2023 1:46 pm
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Valued Member
Uruguay
150 Posts |
In my experience, coins are a more expensive hobbie for a child than comics
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Moderator
 United States
54280 Posts |
I was too poor to save silver coins from circulation.
Show your financial support of the Coin Community Family (click here)See my topic on Mexican Numismatic Medals (click here)
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Moderator
 United States
187446 Posts |
I spent more of my youth in an LCS than a comic book store. 
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Replies: 26 / Views: 2,197 |