Childhood Coin Stories
keets
Posts: 25,351 ✭✭✭✭✭
I had a few PM's with Don Heath and we were talking about some of our childhood beginnings in the hobby. You know, getting a worn VG dime for Christmas or searching through 3 lb. coffee cans of lincolns for a 1965-D penny because the new Red Book had the date listed and I didn't have one yet!!! Maybe your story is the first time you walked into an honest-to-goodness coin shop and your eyes almost bugged out of your head. Whatever it may be, why not tell it in this thread? God knows we can use a little comic relief here lately. I'm sure the membership has some quaint stories from when times were a bit slower and the joy was still pure and energized.
Let 'er rip!!!!
Al H.
Let 'er rip!!!!
Al H.
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and it sets us apart from practitioners and consultants. Gregor
My first and last lesson of why you should NEVER clean coins. Probably lost half of my collection of silver coins back then ...
I love Ike dollars and all other dollar series !!!
I also love Major Circulation Strike Type Sets, clad Washingtons ('65 to '98) and key date coins !!!!!
If ignorance is bliss, shouldn't we have more happy people ??
<< <i>How about the date restoring acid for the mail order Buffalo coins? How about the coin cleaning paste that restored luster? How about your first Dansco? First magnifying glass flashlight? >>
Hell guys - that's rookie stuff! I was spending my hard earned money on stuff that really worked! - Those X-Ray glasses they sold on comic books! I actually got a pair once! LOL - I was a perv even then! LOL
You weren't a perv unless you bought the peephole pen. LOL We were really shooting the breeze about how the hobby has changed. Back in the early 60's, there was one coin shop/jewelry store in my hometown, and I used to spend alot of time looking at coins in the display case. If I wanted to buy coins, it was either from my "dealer" at full retail, or mail order. Once a year, there was a tiny show. I even tried the unsearched bag of pennies from the dogtrack that was advertised in the back of the comic books. Ebery time we went on vacation, I always managed to go to the coin shop where we were staying. On my first trip to NY, I made it to Macy's. They had the first real selection I had seen. Too cool. There was actually a vending machine at the local Clarks dept store that sold dateless buffaloes for .25 in plastic eggs. I guess I was hooked even then. My grandfather started my collection in 1962 when he gave me an 1893-CC he had saved, along with a Columbian Expo half. I still have both coins.
and it sets us apart from practitioners and consultants. Gregor
Well the Doctor told me, man Lucy you don't need no pills...
Just a handfull of nickels and a jukebox to cure your ills!
"Senorita HepKitty"
"I want a real cool Kitty from Hepcat City, to stay in step with me" - Bill Carter
and i still remember when the first K-Mart opened up. i was a teenager by then and they had the gumball typoe machines with the afore mentioned plastic eggs that held anything from a steel cent to a worn out buffalo.
al h.
Frank
away at those Whitman folders. Such good memories.
Brian.
One time I came across an 1875 seated dime. Bought it for $1. That was easily the first coin in my collection worth more than $10. I still have it.
I also remember cutting my 61 & 62 proof sets into proof singles because the singles, added together, had a book value higher than the complete set.
As a teenager I had to travel to High School by city bus. One of the layovers was in the vicinity of three pawn shops, all of which had coins that I could only dream about. Beautiful Morgan dollars in those revolving showcases and cranky old men behind the counter. I now have one of those revolving showcases with various stuff in it, including Morgans, but I try hard not to be one of those cranky old men.
As a young father, I moved my family into a new (to us) very old house. When we were shown the house there were quite a few very old items items left here and there. Medicine bottles, tins, old old apliances and smelly old furniture. When we moved in all of these had been removed. About a year or so later my young son crawled into an as yet unexplored cranny under the stairs and found an old box of Walking Liberty and Franklin Halves, over $200.00 face value but all common dates. He still has the best of them. The rest went to his college fund.
Then I guess to occupy our time Dad would bring home a bunch of penny rolls for us to sort through.We always flipped the heads to tails to look for wheaties.This is in about 1964.Then I remember at one or the other grandparents we had those blue Whitman books with Lincolns and Mercury dimes and the one spot in the holder that was impossible to fill.Now I know it was the `16D spot or the `09 S VDB spot.I wonder if I/we had a `21 S or D back then...hmmm anit got one now I know that!!!!lol
My second option was to forego the treats and ride a little further to the local coin shop and maybe, if lucky, buy that worn Large Cent.
The coins won most of the time. But, not always.
peacockcoins
I find these stories more interesting than the posts about slabbed coins, it reminds us why many of us fell in love with this hobby, maybe we should all remember this when we get the urge to rip someone.
dollars to us trick or treaters on one Halloween in the '50s.
Each kid got a dollar. It was later in the evening so she may have
run out of candy. I don't have the dollar unfortunately.
My good friend and I got a few rolls of pennies from the bank back
in the 1950's. He was just starting his lincoln collection like me.
As hard as it is to believe, the first coin or two that popped out
of his roll was a 1909-S-VDB. He still has the coin.
My website
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My uncle and I used to sight in our varmit rifles by shooting quarters off a fence. When you could pick off 2 for 3 it
was time to go remove some woodchucks from the orchard. 300 acres of orchards made for a lot of vermin to control.
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Next time I go home I'm taking the metal detector and looking for those quarters and see if I can give them an
honorable burial.
Everything is linear if plotted log-log with a fat magic marker
I had a blast, and it gave me something to do. And then well.....that's when i figured out we had a coin shop nearby and a fellow friend and collector (we were classmates in elementary school) told me that they sold Wheat Pennies by the roll?!?!?!
So well, I finally bought one roll of Wheaties for $3.00. I was like WHOA!!! It was the first time I had seen that many wheaties come out from a single roll of pennies. I think that was the reason i stopped going to Safeway and well asking for their change.
I do, however, still look through my pocket change and recently have found several silver war time nickels, along with several silver dimes and quarters.
- Ilham
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Always lookin' out for PCGS MS66 Red Wheaties!!
I guess the child wanted to spend to coin.
Todd
800.954.0270
My Website
"Everything I have is for sale except for my wife and my dog....and I'm not sure about one of them."
I also used to trade coins with an aunt who lived near by my home. She saved just about every silver coin she could when silver was removed in 1964. We spent many enjoyable hours together. She stopped collecting when I left home and joined the Marines in 1974. She said there was no one to collect coins with. Shes now 95 and I visit her everytime I'm home. I got her a folder for the State Quarters which she enjoys collecting. When I see her I make sure shes up todate if she hasn't already done so. And for a few moments we turn back the clock to our bygone trading days.
The memories of these early collecting days give me lots of pleasure. The excitement of a new find was genuine and the cost was usually limited to face value or close to it. As a matter of fact this thread is a lot closer to what real collecting is about than those with 100+ posts calling each other names. Maybe this is a good way to close out the year and wish you all a Happy 2003.
.
Mine sounds like a combination of some that have already been told. I started with a paper route, pulling out Lincolns for my Whitman folder. My grandmother worked downtown and in the summer when I was about 12, I convinced my parents I was able to take the bus downtown and meet her for lunch sometimes. I'd go early and make the rounds of three places - two coin shops and the one big department store that had a coin department. Never bought a single coin! But they were nice enough to let me gaze into the cases at coins I had only read about in the Redbook.
There was one time when I was sorting through the paper route money that I picked up a Lincoln and nearly fell out of my chair - a 1914-D! I screamed to tell my parents what I found. We took it to a coin shop in the neighboring borough, only to be told it was an altered 1944-D. The owner wouldn't return it, saying it was against federal law to have such a counterfeit and he was required to turn it in. He explained why it was a fake to the satisfaction of my parents (and me), and they said OK. That was a long, sad ride home! On the upside, that experience made it possible for me to spot the same type of fake that a guy tried to sell to a dealer I was working with at a show last year.
To close with one of those "great circle of life" stories, at breakfast one day at last year's ANA Summer seminar I happened to share a table with a young guy who turned out to be the son of the owner of one of those shops I loitered in way back when!
New collectors, please educate yourself before spending money on coins; there are people who believe that using numismatic knowledge to rip the naïve is what this hobby is all about.
Cameron Kiefer
Another story I remember well was during the big gold & silver runup, when silver hit $50 and gold about $850. I was in a coin shop in Orchard Park NY selling whatever junk silver I had, it was right near the peak (I probably had $50 or so face). The dealer said that he had to work every night into the wee small hours, because he had to "lay off" the silver he bought on somebody, he couldn't aff ord to own it overnight and take the risk of a big loss. He was bemoaning the fact that he had missed a profit of $7,000 the previous night because he had stayed late as usual and sold all his silver, but if he had just gone home & still owned it in the morning he would have been $7,000 richer. Such was the mania.
Coinlearner, Ahrensdad, Nolawyer, RG, coinlieutenant, Yorkshireman, lordmarcovan, Soldi, masscrew, JimTyler, Relaxn, jclovescoins
Now listen boy, I'm tryin' to teach you sumthin' . . . . that ain't an optical illusion, it only looks like an optical illusion.
My mind reader refuses to charge me....
First Eye-opener : Went to some kind of SesquiCentennial (150th) celebration in Lafayette, Indiana in 1966 (I was 12). Found a guy selling bronze "coins" with the outline of Indiana on one side with the date 1816. Spent the entire $5 I had for the day on this "150 year old" proof coin. Couldn't understand how this guy could have cornered the market on such a rare coin! He had dozen of them and they were all in proof condition!!!!!! Not sure if I still have it, But I do seem to see one now and then on ebay. And you can't beat the price - they're still around $5 !!!!! LOL Want to see one? I found this one on ebay just now- #3302372513. Can someone link? What a dumbazz I was!!!
Joe
Good thread, Keets. Interesting and fun to read.
Clankeye
I would go to the bank on monday afternoon after school and exchange my coin for rolls of coins in the bank. He would let me sit in his office for hours going thru rolls of coins. He would mark the rolls I looked at so that I would know which ones that I had seen already.
Time went on I stopped collecting for a while. when I got married I bought a house in town and three doors down from me my new neighbor was no other than the bank manager.. We talked about those days back in the early 60's and how much fun I had .
Rainbow Stars
Used to blow some of the allowance on balsa wood gliders, like Braddick. 'S' mintmarks were uncommon, as someone else mentioned. I always got a little thrill whenever one popped up.
The smartest thing I ever did was take all the old junk silver rolls my parents had saved and cash them in when silver hit $50/oz. I think I remember getting 30x face value back then, but now I think I must have been dreaming.
And how exciting it was to get proof sets directly from the mint! To this day, they're still worth exactly what I paid for them 25 years ago. I still get a kick out of getting that box from the mint.
Never found anything of particular value in all the thousands of rolls I must have searched. Not that I remember anyway. But a couple of months ago I found a misstruck Delaware quarter in my pocket change, and somebody happily gave me $42 for it on eBay. Funny how things work.
--csw
Tiger trout, Deerfield River, c. 2001.
I still have the Bike (baskets are all rusted but can be restored it's a schwin) and i still have all the silver coins. And yes i still have the Wonder mouse........... Yes they were the best times of my life.
"The silver is mine and the gold is mine,' declares the LORD GOD Almighty."
Fast forward 20 years...........
About 3 years ago my wife and I were cleaning our basement, and I happened to find that old, blue Whitman coin folder my Dad had given me on my birthday long ago. It was neat, but back into the box it went again. However, I was unable to keep it out of my head. And one day approximately 2 years ago, I went back downstairs and pulled out that Whitman folder. The coin collecting 'bug' had finally bitten me. I caught up the cents to present day, and then went out and bought all the Whitman folders from cents through halves, from Indian Heads to Eisenhower's.
I am still working on completing all those folders in low-grade circulated coins, but now have decided to work on some higher grade sets. Mainly Walking Liberty, Franklin, and Kennedy Halves. Unfortunently, my Dad is not really interested in coins still. We have gone through his stash, and compared, and have traded some for 6 months. But since then he hasn't really shown an interest, or done anything with his sets. But I enjoy it a lot, and will continue with this hobby.
my grandparents used to give me and my sisters silver dollars at Christmas and i never knew that you could go to the bank and get them in the 50's and early 60's. i always figured they were rich and just had a whole bunch of them at home!!! i still have all mine but my sisters got rid of theirs.
i'll bet i'm not the only one who ended up with "old coins" whenever a close relative would pass. what's funny about that is the coins that were kept. i still have an odd assortment of 3 cent pieces, shield nickels, indian head cents and silver dollars that have too much value to part with. it makes me wonder what my heirs will get. i almost want to get an ACG slab just for the heck of it!!!
al h.
There is a lesson to be learned here!
Dan
Every day, I'd come in from playing baseball and on the kitchen table would be a paper plate with the day's treasures: Wheat pennies, buffalo nickels, the first V Nickels I ever saw, Indian pennies and silver. They found lots and lots of Mercury dimes, Washington quarters, silver nickels, occasional Barbers and even Seated dimes and quarters now and then. They must have pulled a couple of buckets of coins out of that park. But the neat thing was seeing the pile of them every day; all summer long.
and it sets us apart from practitioners and consultants. Gregor