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.
I suppose someone will spread the rumor that the state quarter will be withdrawn. This is a shame, but it was reported years ago that this formation was unstable, as Carlwolforth said it was held together with wire.
<< <i>Maybe the coin doctors can donate their services for the state. Make it look better than new. Then artificially tone the rock to match what it was... >>
Lol,that was funny.That State quarter design was the wosrt one in my opinion.Nonetheless it's always a shame when something like this happens.
Friends are Gods way of apologizing for your relatives.
Everybody's entitled, but I thought it was a great design. A powerful, curmugeony icon of the "Live Free or Die" state, a simple, clean design, free from all the competing debris and state outlines of most of the state quarters.
Now it's a memory, but still a symbol. It's a good thing it was immortalized on their state quarter before it fell.
I was in Yosemite National Park when a huge rock fell. We were eating dinner. It sounded like the Blue Angles buzzed the campground, then crashed into the mountain. Fortunately it was up river from the campground and most people were at their bar-B-ques. I think there was only one death, a rock climber.
The rocks came down from the rim a few thousand feet up and just blew out any trees in their way. They went across the river and up the other side of the valley a little way. The river was instantly muddy. There was a thick dust cloud. You couldn't see into it more than a few inches, literally. Every once in a while someone would come walking out of the cloud. They were covered with thick dust and coughing. A car came out and had to use its windshield wipers to push the dust off the windshield.
It was truly an awesome spectacle of nature! I was told the rock was the size of a house. The rangers also told us rocks fall all the time, but this was one of the biggest ones...
Well, I live in N.H., and I can tell you that this news is the pits. You have to drive through Franconia notch to appreciate the formation, with the lake below etc...... That ride is going to be "different" now, to say the least. It's absolutely gorgeous up there in the autumn, with the leaves changing etc.. I head north AT LEAST once a year with the family.
Southern N.H. is as booming as anywhere in the USA Mr. Lee. Up north..............different story The Conway area is a metropolis compared to most towns in that area. Quite pretty still.
Spoken like a true world traveler (place tongue in cheek here). Perhaps you should make your way out of California for something other than a coin show. You might want to make your way up here and see just exactly what New England has to offer; it's quite breathtaking. I've spent my life traveling around the world (left coast included) and chose to settle right here in New England. Lots to do all year around.
Darin, you're absolutely right...the ride is just not going to be the same anymore.
I have made three family vacations up into the White Mountains and Franconia Notch area. The Old Man on the face of the NH quarter always reminded me of those good times and brought a smile to my face. My smile will be a little sadder now.
The Old Man on the Mountain Littleton Coin Company
Now there's just one reason...
Just My 2 Cents, Big Mike <><
Let your roots grow down into him and draw up nourishment from him, so you will grow in faith, strong and vigorous in the truth you were taught. Let your lives overflow with thanksgiving for all that he has done. --Colossians 2:7
I imagine that the last New England winter, which was very cold and snowy this year, finally did the trick. This past winter was the pits.
Retired dealer and avid collector of U.S. type coins, 19th century presidential campaign medalets and selected medals. In recent years I have been working on a set of British coins - at least one coin from each king or queen who issued pieces that are collectible. I am also collecting at least one coin for each Roman emperor from Julius Caesar to ... ?
Let your roots grow down into him and draw up nourishment from him, so you will grow in faith, strong and vigorous in the truth you were taught. Let your lives overflow with thanksgiving for all that he has done. --Colossians 2:7
This is the pits. I think you have to have seen "The Great Stone Face" to appreciate it, and you have to appreciate the whole NH political climate to get a feel for what the Old Man symbolized for a lot of us. I've lived here 22+ years, grew up in Western NY state & chose NH when I got out of the Navy. Maybe the feeling isn't as widespread as it once was, but "Live Free or Die" still says a lot about the NH view of things. The Old Man will be missed.
Well maybe it was a good thing that it was placed on the state quarter, its depiction on the state quarter will last for a long time to come until all remaining specimens circulate down to a Fr-2 or less.
No wait, we will still have those ms-65,66,67,68 plastic entombed ones. jim dimmick
<< <i>It's on CNN's front page now with this picture. >>
That had to make a lot of noise when it fell. There's got to be tons and tons of rock there. But if no one was around to hear it then did it really make a noise when it fell?
"The silver is mine and the gold is mine,' declares the LORD GOD Almighty."
I have seen the old man for more than fifty years. Now, take a really good look at those two pictures. He is leaning back taking a snooze. See the two black spots? one is his eye the other his open mouth, look at the honker on that guy.
"If I had a nickel for every nickel I ever had, I'd have all my nickels back".
Anyone want to venture a guess at what this will do to the value of the quarter?? I would guess that in the short term it will bump but will return to some near similiar value.
Dan
I am just throwing cheese to the rats chewing on the chains of my sanity!
First Place Winner of the 2005 Rampage design contest!
<< <i>Anyone want to venture a guess at what this will do to the value of the quarter?? I would guess that in the short term it will bump but will return to some near similiar value.
Dan >>
That sounds like the best guess. If it has any long term impact at all it would likely serve to stop people from releasing the coins to circulation today and make the coin more common in the future. It could possibly have a positive influence on some of the scarcer versions like high grades and proofs if it causes greater demand among a small segment of collectors.
I have seen the old man for more than fifty years. Now, take a really good look at those two pictures. He is leaning back taking a snooze. See the two black spots? one is his eye the other his open mouth, look at the honker on that guy.
you're right laser - except he looks like he's getting ready to sneeze to me.
Comments
09/07/2006
Many years ago I lived near there. Even back then it was wired up to hold it together...
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.
This is a shame, but it was reported years ago that this formation was unstable, as
Carlwolforth said it was held together with wire.
Nothing lasts forever.
and...
This just in::::::
High winds blow Mount Washington into Lake Winnepesaki
<< <i>Maybe the coin doctors can donate their services for the state. Make it look better than new. Then artificially tone the rock to match what it was... >>
Lol,that was funny.That State quarter design was the wosrt one in my opinion.Nonetheless it's always a shame when something like this happens.
Now it's a memory, but still a symbol. It's a good thing it was immortalized on their state quarter before it fell.
Here's a warning parable for coin collectors...
<< <i>It's what everybody comes to see, it's our thing. And now it's gone," said Eric Mueller, who works at Franconia Hardware Store. >>
Not much to do in New Hampshire I guess.
Camelot
The rocks came down from the rim a few thousand feet up and just blew out any trees in their way. They went across the river and up the other side of the valley a little way. The river was instantly muddy. There was a thick dust cloud. You couldn't see into it more than a few inches, literally. Every once in a while someone would come walking out of the cloud. They were covered with thick dust and coughing. A car came out and had to use its windshield wipers to push the dust off the windshield.
It was truly an awesome spectacle of nature! I was told the rock was the size of a house. The rangers also told us rocks fall all the time, but this was one of the biggest ones...
Southern N.H. is as booming as anywhere in the USA Mr. Lee. Up north..............different story
LSCC#1864
Ebay Stuff
<< <i>Not much to do in New Hampshire I guess >>
Spoken like a true world traveler (place tongue in cheek here). Perhaps you should make your way out of California for something other than a coin show. You might want to make your way up here and see just exactly what New England has to offer; it's quite breathtaking. I've spent my life traveling around the world (left coast included) and chose to settle right here in New England. Lots to do all year around.
Darin, you're absolutely right...the ride is just not going to be the same anymore.
Cheers,
Bob
Link
WH
The Old Man on the Mountain
Littleton Coin Company
Now there's just one reason...
Big Mike <><
Let your roots grow down into him and draw up nourishment from him, so you will grow in faith, strong and vigorous in the truth you were taught. Let your lives overflow with thanksgiving for all that he has done. --Colossians 2:7
<< <i>That State quarter design was the wosrt one in my opinion >>
Wait until our home state of California comes out.....gag
Great transactions with oih82w8, JasonGaming, Moose1913.
Also, the landscape in northern New England is some of the prettiest in the world.
<< <i>Why would you go to New Hampshire to see Littleton? Are collectors protesting outside? >>
OOOOOOOOOOHHHHHHHHH!!!!!
OOOOOOOOUUUUUUUUUUUCCCCCCCCHHHHHHHHHHHHHH!!!!!!!!
LMAO!!!
Big Mike <><
Let your roots grow down into him and draw up nourishment from him, so you will grow in faith, strong and vigorous in the truth you were taught. Let your lives overflow with thanksgiving for all that he has done. --Colossians 2:7
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 no optical illusion, it only looks like an optical illusion.
My mind reader refuses to charge me....
No wait, we will still have those ms-65,66,67,68 plastic entombed ones.
jim dimmick
My posts viewed
since 8/1/6
<< <i>It's on CNN's front page now with this picture.
That had to make a lot of noise when it fell. There's got to be tons and tons of rock there. But if no one was around to hear it then did it really make a noise when it fell?
"The silver is mine and the gold is mine,' declares the LORD GOD Almighty."
(picture blatantly stolen from fark.com)
Great transactions with oih82w8, JasonGaming, Moose1913.
<< It's on CNN's front page now with this picture.
>>
See, crawling out there to put that flag up wasn't such a great idea after all, was it?
Dan
First Place Winner of the 2005 Rampage design contest!
<< <i>Anyone want to venture a guess at what this will do to the value of the quarter?? I would guess that in the short term it will bump but will return to some near similiar value.
Dan >>
That sounds like the best guess. If it has any long term impact at all it would likely
serve to stop people from releasing the coins to circulation today and make the coin
more common in the future. It could possibly have a positive influence on some of the
scarcer versions like high grades and proofs if it causes greater demand among a small
segment of collectors.
you're right laser - except he looks like he's getting ready to sneeze to me.
2 Cam-Slams!
1 Russ POTD!
Duck!!!