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Replies: 18 / Views: 3,254 |
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Pillar of the Community
United States
1590 Posts |
The title doesn't completely describe what I mean.
Recently I bought a new Lincoln Dansco, 1909 to current. I bought it to put the coins from my Grandfathers original Dansco (circa 1937)into. Now this was a complete set of regular issues (meaning no 1922 plain). My Grandfather was fortunate enough to live in San Francisco in the 20s to 60s and was able to get all the keys in pocket change.
Well, this went up to 1943p, as that was all there was room for. So I needed to fill it up. My first inclination was to make the rest of the album high grade...easy enough from 43 onwards..but then I had the idea of transferring my circulation collection from the 60s and 70s ( In a whitman folder) to this Album.
The more I thought about the bigger kick I get out of the idea. Especially as my son has agreed to take it from 73 forward with HIS circulation collection.
Well, it may not be a high grade set, but it will be a complete set put together from circulation by three generations of collectors. And who knows, maybe it would continue with a grandchild.
I'm curious, what are your opinions of such a set? I am btw working on a high grade set of Lincolns as well. But to be honest the set put together by my Grandfather, myself and my son means more to me. Its just not as pretty!
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Pillar of the Community
United States
917 Posts |
Sounds like an awesome idea. I would love to have a set that generations of my family worked on to complete regardless of the conditions.
Edited by Coindog 05/08/2012 12:55 am
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Pillar of the Community
United States
4897 Posts |
 Now that is what it is about!
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Pillar of the Community
Australia
4411 Posts |
Quote: I'm curious, what are your opinions of such a set? I could bet my entire collection on nobody disapproving of this set! What a brilliant idea!
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Pillar of the Community
United States
1227 Posts |
Actually . . . . Although nobody in my family is working on a "set," per se, this is exactly why I collect*. My mother has her own little collection of Mercury dimes and an 1849 gold dollar (plus probably a couple others I don't know about--I highly doubt I've seen everything she got from her own days running a register), and she has promised that this is bequeathed to me. In turn, I'm putting together the cool stuff I find, which is intended to go to my nieces on the youngest's 18th birthday; if they don't have the interest at that time, it will be bequeathed to them (with my mother's collection). They may choose to sell it if they need the money, but it's my hope they'll go "Whoa, what's this stuff? COOL!!" and start making their own additions. TL;DR, I love this idea! *I don't think we've met before, so: by far the vast majority of my collection is picked from my cash drawer at work, or from change that customers hand me. I still occasionally get even rare stuff this way--the other day I found a Mercury dime in our coin changer. I do roll hunting when I have $20 to spare, but I think that probably also counts as circulation collecting, since it's not boughten strictly as a collector item.
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New Member
United Kingdom
36 Posts |
Great idea! I have given some coins that my Granddad gave me to my son the collector. Granddad didn't formally collect, but picked up stuff from his travels (he was in the Navy). However, we have some Chinese cash coins that he gave me - now he never went to China, but Grandma's Grandfather did! So, could it be that my son has Chinese cash coins picked up by his Great Great Great (?) Grandfather! Cool if it were true!
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Moderator
 United States
56855 Posts |
A little off topic,sorry. I was wondering if you could post a photo of the circa 1937 Dansco album? I hope you are going to keep it. I am pretty sure that it is collectible in it's own right. John1 
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Pillar of the Community
United States
2295 Posts |
Yeah, having an album that old would be pretty cool to see. How does it compare to today's Dansco albums?
And that is really great to have a collection from 3 generations. That is what it is all about. Most people start the hobby by collecting cents from circulation and still do and are quite active in doing it. That is how I got started and continue to collect, but I also buy coins and currency too.
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Bedrock of the Community
United States
20753 Posts |
Any coins your acquired from a Dad, Grand Dad, etc. are worth a lot more than the coin values. You can always buy a coin, if the price is within your budget, but you can not buy memmories. Once gone, someone that gave you something, anything, is part of your own history and memmories. One thing about coin collecting, a great thing to pass on.
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Pillar of the Community
United States
3755 Posts |
That is a flipping AWESOME idea! That is a great way to do it. I too am working on high grade albums including a Lincoln with proof Dansco. But to take my fathers pennies from circulation, add mine then get my son to help...
Oh, I agree, KEEP the old Dansco! That is a collectible on its own.
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Pillar of the Community
United States
6326 Posts |
Some of my most treasured coins are those from my Great-Grandfathers, my Grandfathers, and my parents. They are "immersed" into a few of "my" albums. And my collection will be passed to a lucky family member who will hopefully continue with it.
As what most have said here......these kinds of collections are the Holy Grail that most of us respect and value THE MOST ! "Circulation grade" or not.......it will always transcend monetary value.
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Moderator
 United States
188052 Posts |
I like the idea of this circulation built Lincoln Cent set spanning three generations, but I feel that it is going to end there. The Lincoln Cent has been in death throes for a few years now, at least as a circulation piece. If it survives, it will only be an NIFC issue in annual sets and possibly premium rolls. While you will certainly be able to continue to tradition of the set, the next generation will not be adding to it from circulation. I built most of my collection from circulation. It has been a wonderful time, but I know that time is coming to an end. Finding the current issues has been increasingly difficult over the last ten years.
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Pillar of the Community
United States
1227 Posts |
jbuck, not necessarily so. I have three silver quarters in my collection, two of them very lovely 1964 AUs. On CCF we just graded a Morgan dollar for my boss that somebody spent, and the only Peace dollar I own was bought out of someone's pocket for $10--it was their "lucky pocket coin" that they were happy to leave to my niece. Today, right now, in 2012, would you expect that in the span of less than ten months I could get a Mercury dime, two Roosevelt silvers, a 1969 Kennedy, three silver quarters, two Buffalo nickels (one of them XF/AU), two Indianhead pennies (one of them AU), a Morgan, a Peace, seven $1 silver certificates, a 1996 die clash (my most recent find), and an XF 1913 wheathead penny (among literally hundreds of other wheats, quite a few of them from the 1910s and 1920s), all out of a cash drawer? Would you expect that a year ago a cashier at another store in my chain heard her manager go "these dimes are all green, YUCK!" and rescued an entire roll of mixed Mercury and Roosevelt silvers that, sans verdigris, were all at worst XF, or that in the last ten months the store closest to my house produced a brand-new collector when he found a $10 silver certificate in his drawer? All true stories. I've only ever made three coin purchases, and with the exception of the Peace dollar and the Liberty V nickels, those purchases were only to augment what I found in circulation--the wheathead books I got from my boss contained mostly coins worse, not better, than I'd found in my cash drawer, and were bought because I wanted the steelheads and the misplaced 1883 someone had put in it. I think it's safe to say that forty years from now, someone will come up a nickel short in a purchase and go "hold on--" and whip out five pennies, even if the penny is not strictly, specifically in circulation anymore. I can say that with confidence--I have easily a dozen "no longer circulating" coins pulled from circulation to prove it.
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Moderator
 United States
188052 Posts |
If I were lucky enough to be in your position, I would be more optimistic about circulation finds. Hold on to that as long as you can! 
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Pillar of the Community
United States
2295 Posts |
But if they stop minting the cent, since it is worth much more than a cent, banks and the Federal Reserve will pull all cents from circulation. That is exactly what Canada will do this fall, for their cents. The US will follow the same process, in the near future. No one knows the exact date yet, but it will happen.
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Pillar of the Community
United States
6326 Posts |
Quote: But if they stop minting the cent, since it is worth much more than a cent, banks and the Federal Reserve will pull all cents from circulation  They have the Kennedy half as NIFC since 2002. It is still in circulation and $1,000.00 boxes can be ordered through the banks by me and you. Silver hunters love em' ! But though the average common Kennedy half has no silver of course, it's mostly A HUGE MEGA WEIGHT of .750 copper ! Much Much more than any Cent contains ! (though not as close to pure as the Cent) And this Half coin still lingers around......and even "Copper Hoarders" don't hoard this half. Though "NIFC" still means that it is still minted for annual Sets and rolls, it isn't in "circulation", and still quite readily available. A "complete" stoppage on minting something ? ....... I'm not really sure what happens....but another example is the Ike dollar, Buffalo nickel, and the Suzy B.....and even some others that still "linger" for many many years with a complete stoppage of minting. Building "complete" sets from circulation.........There are a few exceptions maybe, and fewer every few years. And it will be impossible at some point to put complete circulation sets together of most coins from our "history"...... this is just an inevitable thing.
Edited by eaglefoot 05/09/2012 11:09 am
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Replies: 18 / Views: 3,254 |