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Replies: 5 / Views: 2,230 |
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Pillar of the Community
United States
4008 Posts |
Hi, All: My wife and I took a driving trip through the US Southwest last May and had a great time. We saw Reno, Lake Tahoe, Las Vegas, Boulder Dam, Grand Canyon, Phoenix, Tucson, Carlsbad, Roswell, Albuquerque, Durango, Salt Lake City, Boise, and then home to Vancouver, WA. One of the places we enjoyed the most was the White Sands Monument area. While there, I bought my first "silver" item in recent times. I know that it is only "silver washed" or plated but it is still a nice memento of the trip. With the price of silver up so much these days, they are probably selling these for a whopping $15 now, $5 more than I paid!   Not sure why this is so gray looking. The actual medallion is shiny and silver in color. Will have to work on that. Anyone else have a keepsake or trip memento like this?
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Pillar of the Community
United States
3670 Posts |
Very unique piece, white sands new Mexico, much mystery out that way eh.... My mom went to New York in 2001, and bought a bunch of twin tower silver rounds for like 10 bucks each, and she gave me 8 of them to get started back in the beginning of the year, when I said I was interested in getting into coin collecting.... Six are the tower coins and one is a Pentagon, and the other is a NYPD.... I noticed a twin tower coin ended from 2001 on ebay like a day or two back for around 75 bucks. Another fine example, no matter how low silver falls (And I think in this day an age it can only fall so far, I mean four dollar silver an oz., I will believe that when I see it or 1.50 gas per gallon), certain coins will always fetch a nice profit....
Edited by Silverhawk74 05/07/2011 6:55 pm
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Pillar of the Community
 United States
4008 Posts |
Quote: Very unique piece, white sands new Mexico, much mystery out that way eh... Indeed there is. There is also some family history in this. In the late 1950s and early 1960s, my Dad was a US Army missile launch control officer and instructor in guided missile electrical systems. He often went to the White Sands testing range for "shoots". It was a top secret base back then and only US military personnel and a few heavy weight politicians with high security clearances could get in. Anyway, he would tell my family about how things went with the shoot and we would all listen very attentively. He did not relate any details, just the general activity. We knew that we were hearing history in the making. Quote: My mom went to New York in 2001, and bought a bunch of twin tower silver rounds for like 10 bucks each, and she gave me 8 of them to get started back in the beginning of the year, when I said I was interested in getting into coin collecting....  Now that is awesome. Your Mom did you a HUGE favor with that and what a great way to start collecting. Those coins are going to be worth BANK someday. Hang on to them until you can either make a great purchase with them or pass them on to the next generation. Quote: Another fine example, no matter how low silver falls (And I think in this day an age it can only fall so far, I mean four dollar silver an oz., I will believe that when I see it or 1.50 gas per gallon), certain coins will always fetch a nice profit.... Silver will be volatile and there is no way around that. We can profit from that if we buy and sell carefully but for the most part, collectors do not worry too much about the current price of silver. It goes up, it goes down, and we will always buy a little here and there no matter what. As to that terribly expensive gasoline... is it really all that expensive? If we think about it in terms of silver, no not really. A gallon of gas costs about $4 today. With silver at $36 an oz., that would be 1/9th or 0.111 of an oz. A 90% silver quarter contains about 0.18 oz. of silver, so would buy 1.6 gallons of gas. A 16 gallon tank can be filled for $2.50 in silver. That may seem like a lot to the younger folks on here who appreciate the price of silver but a lot of us older folks remember when a silver dollar WAS $1 and not $35-40 like it is today. So, all you people out there who are hollering about the "high price of gas"... just understand that gas isn't high - our money is just too cheap to buy much of it anymore. 
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Valued Member
United States
70 Posts |
This is really a nice coin and some fool went and put a hole in it, why would someone damage something so nice as that.
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Pillar of the Community
United States
1450 Posts |
I have a momento from White Sands,a piece of Trinitite. It is a green glass formed from the fusing of sand under the heat of the first atomic explosion. I will try to get a picture of it to post. A friend of mine who worked for the National Park Service(I have worked 7 seasons in parks myself)got it for me from the site. I guess there is one day a year that the public can search a small area for Trinitite so he found a piece and sent it to me. It is one of my prized "historical" possessions.
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Pillar of the Community
 United States
4008 Posts |
Quote: This is really a nice coin and some fool went and put a hole in it, why would someone damage something so nice as that. Because it is part of a key chain?  Quote: I have a momento from White Sands,a piece of Trinitite. It is a green glass formed from the fusing of sand under the heat of the first atomic explosion.
Oh, man! That is an AWESOME historical artifact. I would LOVE to have one of those. Having been born on Hiroshima Day, that would be right up my alley. 
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Replies: 5 / Views: 2,230 |
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