Old School: An Indian Cent Collection

No slabs, no stickers, no registry, no insignificant varieties.
You can actually hold each coin in hand and learn about them with QDB's warm and engaging style.
Here's the beginning of a VF/XF Indian Cent collection.
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Comments
The first coin was liberated from a PCGS VF35 slab.
No insignificant varieties! What kind of collection is that? I can't believe that you don't buy into the current hype for microscopic varieties.
Don't buy into the micro variety collecting, but should I run across a 5* Snow variety, then I suddenly become a seller of such.
Jim
When a man who is honestly mistaken hears the truth, he will either quit being mistaken or cease to be honest....Abraham Lincoln
Patriotism is supporting your country all the time, and your government when it deserves it.....Mark Twain
I do consider the 1873 op/cl 3 to be significant since it was a deliberate decision. Also, the 1886 T1/T2. So my "perfect" set would have 60 coins. I can do without those two though. No albums have the 73 varieties and the ones that have the 86 varieties will also have 69/69 etc. which I'm not interested in.
I'm old school also. Congrats on a great collection to start!
My current registry sets:
20th Century Type Set
Virtual DANSCO 7070
Slabbed IHC set - Missing the Anacs Slabbed coins
Sell for a big profit ... yes! Buy for a big premium ... NO!
For many, many years the 69/69 was promoted as 69/68. I never bought into it as I was suspect of the variety from the start.
Got this 59 today, PCGS XF40. It will get cracked and put in the album soon.
I "had" a complete set in AU-BU (nix the '56) that I put together in a Dansco album.
I put the set together from the early 1980's till about 1989, then in 1992 I decided to get married.
END OF STORY!!!
Nice start @Morgan White. I began my IHC collection with a couple of the early dates too. You’ll find it challenging as I have.These were among the more difficult ones to find early on. Best of luck in your pursuit. Zack.
