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Replies: 22 / Views: 2,582 |
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Valued Member
Canada
65 Posts |
Every time I get in to my collection I take a look at #0001, a 1944 25 cent. The year was '83-ish and I was only 5 or 6 years old. I wandered into the kitchen and found my dad dropping coins on the counter. "Listen." he said. "Can you hear the difference?" I could. One of the coins was recent and the other, old. He explained that the old coins were made of real silver. This resonated with me even at the tender age of 6. My old man drove cab and had pulled this as change the night before. Ever since I've been on the watch for pre-68 silver and deeply interested in the metal discs we trade for food, durable goods, and entertainment. He collected semi-seriously, and seriously enough to get me interested. I did let it lapse for 30 years, or so, until he passed. Now that he is gone it is the tie that binds across the abyss. I cherish the '44 and, to me, it is the most valuable in my collection. It is still in the holder he put it in many yeas ago and the year is inscribed in his hand.   How did you get started? *** Moved by Staff to a more appropriate forum. ***
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Valued Member
Canada
480 Posts |
I was about 10 years old, standing in Lake Osoyoos in BC's Okanogan, and wiggled my toes in the sand under the water. I hit something hard, and pulled out a 1929 penny. I had never seen a coin like it, with a crown. I ended going to some coin shops, saw the amount of "unusual" coins and paper money, and became interested in many types of money. When I was in my teens, I was a contributor to Charlton, back when it was one catalogue, instead of three. I continue to be interested many types of coins, with current interests including East Asian, Canadian Proof like sets, tokens, wooden money, and transit tickets, plus Canadian and World paper money. I have joined many different numismatic organizations, which I heartily recommend, and have a decent library on numismatics. Find the area(s) that you are interested in, and do a deep dive. You will never regret it!
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Moderator
 United States
56855 Posts |
I think we have had more than one thread on this subject,maybe a MOD can post a link to the main thread? John1 
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Pillar of the Community
 United States
6514 Posts |
My start with my numismatic journey was double faceted. When I was about 6 or 7 years old my biological father used to coin roll hunt Lincoln cents and I would 'help' him. I remember sitting at the dining room table and going through roll after roll finding the occasional gem. The second incident that got me interested in my counter stamped Lincoln Cents I have shared a couple of times here but I'll share it again. We purchased a home in 1977 and the real estate lady gave me what I thought at the time was one of the coolest things. It was in a small blue jewelry box. It was a LMC that was plated silver in color and had been counter stamped with the Liberty Bell to the left of Abraham Lincoln and an outline of the United States in the space to the right. Being pre internet the only thing I could do was put it in my pocket and head to my LCS. He had a couple of different ones for sale which I purchased. All I remember for certain was one of them was a Kennedy facing Lincoln example. I didn't add much to that collection for decades. I rediscovered my three or four coin collection about 3 or 4 years ago haven't looked back since.  
Edited by chafemasterj 04/03/2022 09:53 am
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Pillar of the Community
United States
666 Posts |
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Moderator
 United States
34397 Posts |
"If you climb a good tree, you get a push." -----Ghanaian proverb
"The danger we all now face is distinguishing between what is authentic and what is performed." -----King Adz
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Moderator
 United States
56855 Posts |
I don't know, I have answered that type of question more than a few times. John1 
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Pillar of the Community
 United States
735 Posts |
I got started about 5 years ago when I went to the ANA money museum (Though I had went to the Denver mint about 10 years ago but I had 0 interest in the hobby), I knew nothing of coinage but everything was very neat. The next couple of months I found and went to a local coin show, though I didnt buy anything it was all very fascinating. I was then gifted my first Morgan dollar from my brother & later purchased a red-book, then a full roll of morgans, then a typeset album, now I'm hooked.
I've been collecting for a couple years... Favorite Coin's are Standing Liberty quarters, Working on my type set | Coffee, Corvettes, Coins & the CCF what could be better?
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Pillar of the Community
United States
2049 Posts |
My family moved halfway across the country when I was about 10 years old. I was pretty mad at my parents for making us move and making me leave my friends. My Dad signed me up for the local Pop Warner football team. I didn't want to play so he offered me a silver dollar if I stuck out through the full season. My reaction was whatever, but I did it anyway. At the end of the season he gave me an 1885-P Morgan silver dollar. Man, that thing was a beauty. That was the first coin I remember keeping (never looked through pocket change before and never bought any for collectible purposes).
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Pillar of the Community
United States
4233 Posts |
My grandfather gave his collection away to his five grandchildren when I was 13. They were all kept loose in a box and we took turns picking one after he piled them on a table. He had a lot of Canada George VI silver from the late 40s, as well as other coins from all over the world. We did a little trading afterwards and somehow I ended up with a 1948 dollar, among some other nice ones (47 ML dollar, 48 half, etc). When I found out how much it was worth, it inspired an off-and-on interest for life. My four other siblings and cousins, not so much. I've told this story several times here and elsewhere already but fresh threads are always good. Grandpa was librarian at the Chicago Tribune and people all over the world were sending him coins. I think reporters returning from overseas also brought them. Lots of coins from WWII era and slightly after.
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Valued Member
Canada
89 Posts |
It was my older brother (who isn't a coin collector and never has been) who inspired me to become a collector in a bit of an unusual way. My parents had a huge jar full of pennies, and the summer before I turned 10 (this was in 1987, when Canada still had pennies), my brother said there was a 1913 penny in the jar.
Because my young, curious self had never seen such an old coin, I went searching through the jar for it. I never did find it because it wasn't there, but I did find a lot of pennies from the 50s and early 60s which to me still seemed old and unusual. I set them aside and kept them for myself...the seed was planted. It was a couple of summers later when I was looking at those coins again that I decided to dive into the pool of becoming a collector.
Grant you, I haven't been very active in the hobby for the past 20+ years (since 2000), yet I'm thinking that maybe it is about time to rekindle the joy of the hobby.
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Moderator
 Australia
16809 Posts |
I've answered this in similar threads in the Main part of the forum, but since my answer involves Canadian coins, I'll answer here too. I collected stamps as a child - basically copying my big brother, who collected stamps much more seriously. About 1980, eight years old, the family went to a stamp and coin show - and I saw some world coins for sale that intrigued me. My parents let me buy some, then when we got home, they gave me their hoard of Canadian coins they'd souvenired from when they lived in Canada in the early 1970s (I had been born there, but grew up in Australia). The jewels in this small hoard were a 1950 silver 50 cents and a 1971 British Columbia nickel dollar. My parents said I could pick one, and my brother would have the other. Naturally, I picked the dollar, since it was clearly bigger and more valuable.  My brother gave me the 50 cents some years later. I still have both, and I still have that handful of foreign coins. My "coin 00001" in my database is a rather black (because it's made of zinc) 1950 5 groschen from Austria. It's number 00001 because, well, alphabetical sort, even back then; my experience with stamps had taught me that "Osterreich" was Austria.
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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Bedrock of the Community
United States
20753 Posts |
My first coin was a 43 Steel Cent. And it was brand new when I got it from my Dad.
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Pillar of the Community
4628 Posts |
Rather than start on my kiddie collection with an old penny in 1985 (A 1899 British Britannia penny). And that collection abruptly ended with them being stolen out of my car in 2001 by a group of fiendish hoodrats. I will start on my collection restarting in 2018. I had been reading books on coins for years and fantasising about what I wanted to collect again. Besides NZ coins and change, the British Halfcrowns and Australian Florins stood out for me. I had already been collecting stamps at a semi professional level and selling them since 2005, so was ready to dip my toes in the world of coin collecting again. I had been burned long enough by my carelessness back in 2001. I had been saving change since 2001 and buying and selling coins off 2 ladies running a thrift shop, but never thought to keep them for myself until early 2019. The other change was that I finally had a permanent part time job for the first time in 8 years, no more contracts or "gig" jobs - basically the end of a precarious existence. The first coin brought was my avatar coin, this 1929 halfcrown.   Originally brought as a one off, it basically made me want more of them due to the beauty and the state of it. From that point I never looked back. Although looking at my photo history, the oldest photo I uploaded was that of a 1937 Australian Crown from May 2019. I still have both coins now.
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Pillar of the Community
Australia
9376 Posts |
Other than an old English penny, that my Dad gave me, this is what got me started. http://goccf.com/t/4060This is the old penny. 
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Pillar of the Community
4628 Posts |
That was great and I read the thread of yours from 2006, you would have been my age back then! Great you still have those coins too. None of my 2001 and earlier collection survives. My oldest surviving coins I own were bits of change and some collector sets I brought in Europe back in 2014.
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Replies: 22 / Views: 2,582 |