What is your best "grandpa" find? Did anyone's grandpa ever stash something really neat a
TheLiberator
Posts: 1,023 ✭✭✭
Most grandpas seem to have left circulated mercs and other "rarities" for their relatives. Has anyone here inherited or been given anything really interesting or rare from their grandfather? Mine left tons of circulated mercs and silver washingtons. In one small bag of silver roosevelt dimes was one really nice 1894 barber dime. That was the best thing I found and I'll keep it forever. Whay about you guys?
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I wasn't born until 1944, so I don't know what he may have had stashed away.
Ray
1923 High Relief Peace $ - Just sent in and graded ~2 months ago... MS64
It was hand graded, by my uncle I think, as MS63.
Rest of grandma's coins, she sold off in the recent years before she passed away in order to pay her bills
(before I could afford them, before I knew about what was happening, and before I got back into collecting).
I've been told I tolerate fools poorly...that may explain things if I have a problem with you. Current ebay items - Nothing at the moment
The best things though were the stories and the old picture album. Priceless.
Got quoins?
">"http://www.cashcrate.com/5663377"
Silver polish was one of my "tarnish" removers at that time.
roadrunner
My grandfather had amassed quite a collection from what my father told me. He had bags full of Barber coins, Buffalo nickels, Merc dimes, and Silver dollars along with a slew of other goodies. He kept everything in 3 different large safety deposit boxes at the bank so you know he had a lot. I never got to see any of the hoard, but I did come across a beautiful Flying Eagle cent sitting in a desk drawer at his house, loose with no holder around it
Well back in around 1989-1990 time frame my grandmother had a stroke and needed around the clock attention. He sold his Condo, the coins, his fathers gold Railroad watch and Gold railroad pass to cover the cost of the care. From what I hear, he had no idea of the value and got very little for the entire collection. It's just a real shame I didn't collect back then because I could have helped him to at least sell his coins at market price.
Now that all of my grandparents have passed, I really wish I had a coin or two to remember then by even if it was circulated Lincoln Cents. My grandfather was a good man and a scholar and he deserved better than that
HEY!..I see that my avatar went from "veteran" to "collector"!....
The Indian Cent board has many holes filled in most with good to fine.
Later that day I found in an old desk inside a wood box loose. The key. A full good 1877! Wht it was separated from the rest I do not know.
Great fun though. My Uncle has them all now.
Tbig
My father passed away in 1995. I have 20th century type set that he put together in an old whitman folder that was pre 1965. It has no slots for clad coins. There is a 1963-D Washington quarter that he put in the slot right out of a roll. All of these coins he pulled from circulation working in a service station in the early 60's.
Needless to say..it is very dear to me.
Unfortunately my Grandfather collected stamps and my Grandmother still has them. I hear that hobby has taken a beating so I'm not expecting much. She does have a few rolls of uncirculated double eagles put away "for investment" he bought in the early 1970's I'm hoping to get a look at some day - not sure if they are numismatic quality material or not.
NOTE: No trees were killed in the sending of this message. However, a large number of electrons were terribly inconvenienced.
Type collector since 1981
Current focus 1855 date type set
He saved alot of odds and ends but each coin is virtually mint state. He saved quite a few 2 1/2 Dollar gold coins, which he gave to my aunt.
He also started a collection of 1883-1912 Liberty Head "V" Nickels. All the coins were AU 55-MS63, and that was the first collection I completed back in the mid to late 1980's. He didn't have the key dates, but seeing all the empty holes in that album got me back into collecting.
I only wished he saved more SLQ's !
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Coin collecting is not a hobby, it's an obsession !
New Barber Purchases
I also love to go through rolls to find coins.
BST
MySlabbedCoins
I will keep that coin and pass it down. Hopefully it will remain in the family forever.
Brian
No one quite knew what to make of the BIG PENNY since it was fairly corroded and the full date was unreadable, at least to all but me.... I swore it was 1793 but all the old folks would agree on was that said LIBERTY & UNITED STATES OF AMERICA. Well, on a trip to the dime store I spied a Red Book and begged my parents to buy it for me. On returning from the store I found a match in the famous Wreath Cent design and lo and behold, it was only minted in 1793.
More remarkable was that he found the old copper while plowing a field in the spring before planting crops. Pure fate! He just happened to stop the mule at the end of the last row and spotted something odd laying in the row. He reached down and stuck it in his overalls surmising it may be a button.
He died in 1979 from an accident and I purchased those three coins from my grandmother soon thereafter.....I still have them and I'll pass them along someday.
Jim
I sent it in to PCGS and it went 65. That was at the top of the boom in the early 90's. Back then his family could have gotten 5 to 6 grand for it. My Aunt opted to keep it. Still sitting there in a safe deposit box in an old rattler holder.
Clankeye
and you know the rest of the story
My OmniCoin Collection
My BankNoteBank Collection
Tom, formerly in Albuquerque, NM.
1832 5 Franc (France), Fine
1917 1 Franc, XF
1839 Booby Head cent, AG
1845-O Seated Dime, Fr
I put my three in a glass “chicken” candy container and looked at them once in a while.
Then one day in (I think 1949) I was looking through a copy of Reader’s Digest and they had an article about “Coins to Save” or some such title. In the article they mentioned looking for the “S” mintmark on the reverse of Indian Head Cents. There were only two dates with the “S”.
The really valuable one is the 1909-S, but the article said that it would also be good to save the 1908-S. I ran to my “chicken” and took out my pennies. Voila! An “S” on the back of the 1908.
The article also said that baking soda was good for cleaning coins. So I …cleaned… this coin probably once every month or at most every few months by vigorously rubbing it with DRY baking soda.
As it is now, the condition of the coin is AT LEAST “Very Fine” with claims to “Extremely Fine.”
I can only IMAGINE what the condition was before I began systematically grinding it down on a regular basis with DRY BAKING SODA!
and here is an image I found on the internet