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Replies: 18 / Views: 3,863 |
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New Member
United States
7 Posts |
Are any of you collecting Barber quarters. What grade range do you collect. Are you having as much trouble finding them as I am. Would love to hear from you Thanks *** Edited by Staff to clarify topic title. Titles are important! ***
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Moderator
 United States
16677 Posts |
Great series and under appreciated in my opinion. There are some very rare and scarce dates in this series. 1896-S, 1901-S, 1913-S, as well as some of the semi-key dates, 1897-S, 1914-S to name a couple. They are getting tougher to find as most are either well worn or have some kind of problems. Coin shows are a place to look. They are getting harder to find in nice problem free condition. Welcome to the CCF Harris!
swcoin.ecrater.com
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New Member
 United States
7 Posts |
David Thanks for your reply, yes they are under appreciated as evidenced by the fact that 45 people looked at this post and only you responded. US coins are artifacts of American history, In my opinion the period of time that these coins were minted were some of Americas most interesting days. I will be attending a regional coin show in North Texas mid January.Wish me luck,and happy hunting to you.
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Bedrock of the Community
United States
12437 Posts |
Barber quarters are usually quite easy to find in AG3-F12 but tend to be a bit scarce in the prime collector grades of VF/EF and then seem to be somewhat plentiful(albeit pricey) in AU and above. The main reason for the odd distribution is that most everything from the three Barber series tended to either see alot of use in commerce or they were saved, light to moderate circulation seems to be the exception and not the norm. It is a challenging set and the three coins vermontensium mentioned tend to be stoppers for most collectors. IMO, a VF/EF set would probably be the optimal grade range and make for a very nice set but you will have to do alot of searching for nice examples.
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Pillar of the Community
United States
2734 Posts |
The Barber design was not well-regarded when it was new. Collectors have generally held both its preceding design (Seated Liberty) and succeeding design (Standing Liberty) in higher regard. This means less saving of Barber quarters in higher grades when they were new. And then, the Great Depression hit and a lot of the Barber quartersthat were saved were returned to (heavy) circulation. A lot of saved Standing Liberty quarters also were returned to circulation at that time, but S.L.'s were more likely to be pulled back out of circulation by collectors after the Depression ended (by which time, it had been replaced with the Washington quarter). Many Barber coins stayed in circulation until the early 1960's, when their bullion value exceeded their face value. Even today, I've seen Barber-only 'junk silver' bags for sale at coin shows. It took me a while to find the three 1906-D Barbers (10¢-25¢-50¢) in VF-XF grade....
Edited by DNA 12/11/2009 11:23 am
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Bedrock of the Community
United States
11951 Posts |
Sorry about not replying. I do like Barber coins a lot. I am not anywhere near the most knowledgeable person here. But have looked at and bought coins for many years, and seeing Nice barbers does not happen very often. I try to put them away when I see them in at least fine and can get them at a good price.
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Pillar of the Community
United States
763 Posts |
I've recently started seriously collecting Barber quarters. When I was 12, my grandmother bought me a 1901-S Quarter at a coin show. I took a long hiatus from coin collecting and getting the 1901-S authenticated by PCGS recently reignited my interest in coins. So I thought I would try to collect the series. The 1901-S that I have is only in FA-02 condition, but I'm trying to collect most of the others in VF or better. I probably will have to settle for lower grades for the 1896-S and 1913-S. Collecting this series requires some patience because most coin dealers don't stock a lot of them. I expect to be working on this set for the next few years. I recently started a registry set with PCGS, but I'm not sure if I will pursue it or not.
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New Member
 United States
7 Posts |
Gentlemen, Thanks for your time and advice, It was all useful. I will let you know if I have any luck at the January coin show.
Edited by harris53 12/11/2009 2:28 pm
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Rest in Peace
United States
5375 Posts |
I collect the barber series more heavily than any other and have also realized that nice F-EF coins have been going for more than before, probably because of greater interest in coin collecting as a whole in response to rising metal prices.
In fact, one might say I'm addicted to collecting barbers : D
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Valued Member
United States
258 Posts |
I have Barber dimes, quarters and halves in my inventory but it is not something I see very often and as mentioned here most are heavily worn. It is fairly easy to build close to a complete set of each coin in worn condition but finding choice examples has been a challenge to say the least. As another mentioned here Barber coins have not been appreciated when I for one have always liked them and will never turn them down when the price is right even when worn. Sincerely, John Leckrone
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Pillar of the Community
United States
2734 Posts |
I could go around Denver and buy problem-free G-4 Barbers all day, but it's the VF/XF and above that will have you searching a while...
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New Member
United States
11 Posts |
I collect all the Barber series - but the Quarters are my favorite. I've registered my sets on PCGS & NGC - and I'm always upgrading.
Just had another "field day" while I was at FUN in Orlando this past weekend. Three days of searching and I ended up with a half dozen great coins. I'm more than pleased with my newps.
As I hardly ever post here, I'm not familiar with image posting.
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Pillar of the Community
United States
8904 Posts |
Mike Hayes wrote: Quote: I'm not familiar with image posting. It's pretty easy. When you hit "Reply to Topic", the fill-in screen pops up, (You have figured this one out if you have posted, so far, so good!). You'll notice a green camera figure near the bottom left of the posting box, just above the two check boxes ("Check here to include your profile signature" is the top one...). Click on that green camera and it opens a window to browse your computer for pictures. Note: the pics can not be much bigger than 100MB or the uploader will reject your picture. I use Irfanview (free from Irfanview.com) to resize the pictures. Also if you want to post a second picture and click on "post another picture", the original post screen will come back up and you will need to minimize that screen to get to the picture upload box again. (Just a small picture uploader nuance...) And then you're off and running! Good Luck! Post LOTS of pictures! 
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Pillar of the Community
United States
6381 Posts |
It's tragic that in this thread about Barber quarters we haven't seen any pictures! That's gotta change....  
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Valued Member
United States
97 Posts |
The above coin is great! and its funny how it did take a while before a pic was posted...I dont have any as of yet myself, will there be more pics?
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New Member
United States
11 Posts |
I'll try and use Photobucket ---  Part of my 1898 Proof Set...
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Replies: 18 / Views: 3,863 |