POLL: As a kid, do you recall seeing Mercury dimes in general circulation?

Just wonding if I'm the only one!
And I'm not talking seeing a stray one or two over a lifetime ..... I'm talking seeing them fairly routinely, in general circulation.
Dave
And I'm not talking seeing a stray one or two over a lifetime ..... I'm talking seeing them fairly routinely, in general circulation.
Dave
Always looking for original, better date VF20-VF35 Barber quarters and halves, and a quality beer.
0
Comments
As best I can recall, I would say I got interested in collecting around age 9, just about the time we were moving from silver to clad.
It was an interesting era, from a collecting standpoint. A massive change was underway.
I'd go to the bank with my dad and he'd pick up a few roll of dimes that I would sift through at home. Seems like I'd pull out four or five Mercs from every roll...they were that common. I routinely got them in change as well.
Then .... in what seemed like just a few years, they all just disappeared, along with their lowly sidekick, the silver Roosy. Poof!
Dave
Also, IHC, buffs, V-nickels, SLQ, Walkers, even a small amount of Barber coinage.
http://www.shieldnickels.net
Plus the far less common Barber
I did get one V-nickel, one Barber dime and a Barber quarter
The quarter on my paper route
BHNC #203
Worry is the interest you pay on a debt you may not owe.
"Paper money eventually returns to its intrinsic value---zero."----Voltaire
"Everything you say should be true, but not everything true should be said."----Voltaire
Great transactions with oih82w8, JasonGaming, Moose1913.
INYNWHWeTrust-TexasNationals,ajaan,blu62vette
coinJP, Outhaul ,illini420,MICHAELDIXON, Fade to Black,epcjimi1,19Lyds,SNMAN,JerseyJoe, bigjpst, DMWJR , lordmarcovan, Weiss,Mfriday4962,UtahCoin,Downtown1974,pitboss,RichieURich,Bullsitter,JDsCoins,toyz4geo,jshaulis, mustanggt, SNMAN, MWallace, ms71, lordmarcovan
BST transactions: dbldie55, jayPem, 78saen, UltraHighRelief, nibanny, liefgold, FallGuy, lkeigwin, mbogoman, Sandman70gt, keets, joeykoins, ianrussell (@GC), EagleEye, ThePennyLady, GRANDAM, Ilikecolor, Gluggo, okiedude, Voyageur, LJenkins11, fastfreddie, ms70, pursuitofliberty, ZoidMeister,Coin Finder, GotTheBug, edwardjulio, Coinnmore, Nickpatton, Namvet69,...
<< <i>I used to see buffalo nickels, Mercury dimes, Standing Liberty quarters, and Walking Liberty halves all the time in change before they started disappearing after 1964 when LBJ debased our coinage. >>
I was 10 years old in '64 and remember finding all of these types in change from time to time.
Mike
the collection each Sunday and trade my allowance ($2.00) for coins I needed.
The Merc's were not plentyful but after a year or so I got within 15 of a complete
set. The book 1 Lincolns the same as with Buff's and Walkers. In my early 30's
I finished the Whitman folders except for the 1916-D; still have not pulled the
trigger for that one.
Check out my iPhone app SlabReader!
<< <i>Nope. I wonder if silver dollars were a common occurrence? >>
Not in the 60's. Walkers and Franklins were generally the highest denom of circ coinage you'd come across and both were common though a Peace dollar might be a Christmas tip for the paperboy.
My cousin pulled a 1916 Standing Lib 25¢ from the milk money tray at school in the 50's. He got nice payday on that score. He knew to look for dates as his dad was a collector and president of the local coin club.
As a kid I helped my brother sell newspapers on the corner on weekends in the mid to late 60s. We were usually done by about 1pm on Sunday and a couple of men would stop by to redeem clad for silver from our weekend take. Mercury dimes were common until the late 60's, but people realized the implications and were pulling the 90% from circulation very quickly. There wasn't much 90% circulating after 1970.
I also remember seeing a First National Bank of Detroit $5 in circulation.
<< <i>Back in the early 60's they were still floating around. >>
LOL... Back in the Early 1960's, I'd find AU Barber Dimes in rolls.
~~~~~~~~~~~~
Coin collecting is not a hobby, it's an obsession !
New Barber Purchases
Come to think of that, that silver quarter is worth about $2.00 today - can you buy the same amount of stuff at 7-11 with that?
==Looking for pre WW2 Commems in PCGS Rattler holders, 1851-O Three Cent Silvers in all grades
Successful, problem free and pleasant transactions with: illini420, coinguy1, weather11am,wayneherndon,wondercoin,Topdollarpaid,Julian, bishdigg,seateddime, peicesofme,ajia,CoinRaritiesOnline,savoyspecial,Boom, TorinoCobra71, ModernCoinMart, WTCG, slinc, Patches, Gerard, pocketpiececommems, BigJohnD, RickMilauskas, mirabella, Smittys, LeeG, TomB, DeusExMachina, tydye
<< <i>They were very common in change when I was a kid....as were all silver coinage. Cheers, RickO >>
Best Regards,
George
I was younger. Some reason I do not remember Standing Lib quarters although i'm sure it is
just a lapse of the old brain cells.
bob
I received a Barber coin in change in 1971. It's a 1911 dime,VF condition,that I still have.
Whoever is careless with the truth in small matters cannot be trusted with important matters.
Latin American Collection
<< <i>Wouldn't you need to be 65 plus to answer yes to this question? Or at least 60 with a really good memory? >>
I'm 59 and I remember plenty of Mercs, as well as Walking Libertys (as common as Franklins at that time--and halves circulated, too!) but I never saw any Barber coinage in circulation, and only one V-nickel. Common to see dateless Buffalos but not Indian cents. Standing Liberty quarters were infrequent but did come along from time to time, much less often than Mercs.
My folks would bring me back a few silver dollars when they went to Las Vegas.
I think if I had been 4 years younger I would have missed it. I still have Danscos filled from circulation--when we were kids, it would have been considered "cheating" to fill a hole by buying a coin. (Trading was OK though.)
A few years ago I was having lunch with the TOP mercury dime collector.
During that time we shared a story about our early collecting days. Both of us pulled these out of cirulation and cleaned them with an eraser, and put them in those blue whitman folders. Funny about that small connection.
I will remember that day with a great friend for a long time.
PS before that he pulled a new upgrade to his collection and showed it to me.
Sure was nice seeing a 1926-S in MS67FB
<< <i>A few folks here saw Barber dimes in circulation
I heard stories about this when I was a child, but I never saw any of them. The closest I ever got was a Barber half dollar a classmate brought to class as lunch money when I was in the 5th grade. I got it for face value, which was not a rip-off in early 1960. It was in Good and listed in the Blue Book for face value.
comfortable margin (~60/ 40). This area was a little slow at the time so new
releases weren't seen right away. In those days the FED still handled the bulk
of the coinage and they didn't rotate their stocks so there were anomalies.
The better dates and higher grades were long gone from circulation but you
could still find XF/AU common dates and some better date culls. This is why
I don't believe many '16-D's had their mint marks worn off; by the time they
had this amount of wear most had been pulled from circulation by collectors.
By 1964 there was a bland sameness to the few surviving mercs. They were
mostly later dates in F/ VF or older heavily worn coins. Even minor "finds" had
become improbable.
I was one of them. I remember a bigger thrill when I got my first new Roosevelt dime.
As I remember it, some Mercuries were in circulation until the very end of silver circulation.
<< <i>Sure - how do you think my old blue Whitman Mercury dime album got filled? >>
DITTO
``https://ebay.us/m/KxolR5
<< <i>I'm 59 and I remember plenty of Mercs, as well as Walking Libertys (as common as Franklins at that time--and halves circulated, too!) but I never saw any Barber coinage in circulation, and only one V-nickel. Common to see dateless Buffalos but not Indian cents. Standing Liberty quarters were infrequent but did come along from time to time, much less often than Mercs.
My folks would bring me back a few silver dollars when they went to Las Vegas.
I think if I had been 4 years younger I would have missed it. >>
Roger that - I'm just shy of 55, and I never saw much of anything. It was a thrill to get a wheat cent or silver of any kind when I started collecting in
the early '70's.