Why is it so hard to find a 1960 Small Date cent in circulation?

One thing I have noticed out of years of roll searching is that I have never EVER found a 1960 Philadelphia small date cent. I've found quite a few Denvers, but never a Philly. Any reasons for this or is it just bad luck?
0
Comments
percentage was set aside at the time. The Denver was so
common that they couldn't all be intercepted. It was pro-
bably close to 10% of the mintage.
The Philly still brings a premium especially in unc and higher
grades but the Denver small date might be the most common
coin in existence (in unc) if you exclude the coins of the last
three years still in FED storage.
The D mints are different, you can still find them and you can find more small date D rolls than large date D rolls so there's no premium for D mints.
I *never* found a 1960-P small date cent in circulation, although I found plenty of 1960-D. I never saw any circulated 1960-P small date cents advertised in coin publications either, although circulated rolls of 1960-D were plentiful.
Mintage estimates at the time were around 2 million for the 1960-P (plus another 100,000 or so proofs), and 65 million for the 1960-D. I don't know if the estimates have changed since that time. Surprisingly, 1960-D small date uncirculated rolls were popular during the 1963-64 roll boom, reaching about $22 per roll at one point (the equivalent of around $150 per roll today). Uncirculated rolls of 1960-P small dates, as I recall, peaked at around $500 per roll.
I think that virtually *all* of the 1960-P small date cents were scooped up by collectors and speculators before reaching circulation.
My Adolph A. Weinman signature

Anyone know the mintage of those mint sets and today's value?
Leo
The more qualities observed in a coin, the more desirable that coin becomes!
My Jefferson Nickel Collection
Anyone know the mintage of those mint sets and today's value?
I didn't know there were any government-issued 1960 mint sets with the small date coins. I've never seen any for sale, and haven't seen them listed in any guide books or value lists. Do you have such a set in original government envelope and cellophane?
My Adolph A. Weinman signature

I remember that at the same time period a 1954 plain was considered to be a tough date, and now nobody cares.
TD
<< <i>I guess that I should feel good when I sought out a mint set with both P & D small dates.
Anyone know the mintage of those mint sets and today's value?
I didn't know there were any government-issued 1960 mint sets with the small date coins. I've never seen any for sale, and haven't seen them listed in any guide books or value lists. Do you have such a set in original government envelope and cellophane? >>
Nah, I was just seeing if anyone was paying attention.
Leo
The more qualities observed in a coin, the more desirable that coin becomes!
My Jefferson Nickel Collection
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 found a 55-S in a roll my dad picked up while in California. 1954-P's turned up from time to time.
<< <i>I also in the early 60's went through over a 1/2 million cents in Arlington, Va. >>
Oh, so YOU'RE the reason I could never find anything good in circulation! Remember Latherow's on Lee Hwy?
60 years into this hobby and I'm still working on my Lincoln set!
I knew it would happen.
My Coin Blog
My Toned Lincoln Registry Set
I remember that at the same time period a 1954 plain was considered to be a tough date, and now nobody cares.
TD >>
I finally found a 1960 small date in circulation, but it was years after 1960.
The first unc rolls I set aside were 1952 cents in 1952. In 1953 I didn't find any. In 1954 unc rolls were available again, but they were mixed 1953 and 1954. Becauseof that, I didn't set any aside. 1955 were solid rolls again, but no doubled dies for me, although I was in the right Fed district. I was on the East Coast, so all these cents were Philadelphia mint.
<< <i>I was collecting coins out of circulation back then also, and never found a P-mint small date in circulation. Or a 1955-S.
I remember that at the same time period a 1954 plain was considered to be a tough date, and now nobody cares.
TD >>
Ditto, same experience as Capt Henway.
Although some people must have found them, because I see circ 1960 Small Dates and 1955-S cents in the Whitman folders quite often.
An authorized PCGS dealer, and a contributor to the Red Book.
I looked in many rolls for that coin and never found one. So I went to the coin shop down the on Ventura Blvd. and paid about $1.50 for an uncirculated example. I brought the coin back to the same dealer a few years later and asked him what it was worth when he explained to me that my coin was not a small date, but the mundane variety.
1. 1960 small date cent. Nearly all of these were saved immediately and sold as rolls. The 1960's saw huge numbers of collectors and roll collecting was really big.
2. 1950-D nickels. These were also recognized as low mintage and nearly all saved right after minting as rolls.
3. 1885-CC dollars. Very difficult to find in circulated condition. A huge percentage of the mintage ended up in vaults and did not circulate. They were found and distributed by the GSA when they did their big CC GSA sale about 40 years ago.
An authorized PCGS dealer, and a contributor to the Red Book.
It would seem to me that the 1960 small date proof set should have a larger premium than $3 - $5 each. I believe they are a great buy
at today's price.
Michael
Don't feel so bad, I've been looking for one since 1960,
and have never found a Small Date. As DrPete mentioned,
roll collecting was extremely popular back then.
Never found a 1950-D Nickel either.
~~~~~~~~~~~~
Coin collecting is not a hobby, it's an obsession !
New Barber Purchases
<< <i>You cannot forget the 1955 S cent, thought by young collectors of the era as an unobtainable key. >>
I never did find one in circulation, wound up having to pay a quarter for one.
60 years into this hobby and I'm still working on my Lincoln set!
<< <i>It is interesting that three coins come to my mind that are higher profile, carry a premium over common date coins, yet are much more common in uncirculated condition than they are circulated....
1950-D nickels. These were also recognized as low mintage and nearly all saved right after minting as rolls. >>
I actually plucked a nice VF out of circulation in the 70s, still have it too!
60 years into this hobby and I'm still working on my Lincoln set!
<< <i>Perhaps ads liked this helped to wipe them from circulation ... $3750 or a new car for $50 face of 1960 small date Lincolns. >>
Four years later, the 1960-P small date peaked at about $400 per roll, or $40,000 per $50 face bag. That's around $300,000 in today's dollars!
My Adolph A. Weinman signature

70% or more of all the sm dt '60 cents are already lost, destroyed, or tossed into Niagra
Falls for good luck. At any give time 75% of cents aren't even really circulating because
pennies no longer have any value except by the bucket full. The older the cent the more
likely it is to be sitting in a half full bucket waiting to get cashed in.
This means fewer than a quarter million of these in circulation hidden among 40 or 50 billion
pennies.
As copper gets selectively removed from circulation they'll get even tougher.
It's a little surprising so few are reporting finds. Perhaps they aren't quite as high mintage
as my assumption.
Ironically since this thread was first posted the '60-D sm dt is probably become more common
than either 2008 cent in Unc.
<< <i>
It would seem to me that the 1960 small date proof set should have a larger premium than $3 - $5 each. I believe they are a great buy at today's price.
>>
Speaking of 1960 Small Date Proof Lincolns ...
One of the prettier toned examples ...
My Coin Blog
My Toned Lincoln Registry Set
We'll never know for sure, but I think that upwards of 90% of the approximately 2 million 1960-P small date cents were captured by speculators before reaching circulation. In the early 1960's I was living on the East Coast and actively looking for examples from circulation. I found several of the Denver coins, which had somehow migrated from the Western U.S., but I never found a circulated 1960-P, never heard of anyone else finding one, and never saw any advertised in Coin World (although there were numerous ads for uncirculated singles and rolls).
By contrast, the 1950-D nickel was also heavily saved in bag quantities before reaching circulation, but circulated examples were readily available for around half the price of the BU's. Despite being on the East coast, I was able to find three 1950-D nickels in circulation in the early 1960's.
My Adolph A. Weinman signature

<< <i>
<< <i>
It would seem to me that the 1960 small date proof set should have a larger premium than $3 - $5 each. I believe they are a great buy at today's price.
>>
Speaking of 1960 Small Date Proof Lincolns ...
One of the prettier toned examples ...
Wow! That one might have a premium of more than $5.
Jim