To those of us 60+, do you remember the FIRST TIME you held a Lincoln Memorial Reverse Cent?

I do. About a block and a half from home was a tiny neighborhood store. Billy Breders store. There was a mailbox out front. My first little kid errands were walks up to mail a letter. That of course meant a bit of penny candy. ......and I remember getting one, my first one, and looking hard to see Abe sitting in there. Instead of going right home I walked a half block to show it to my Grandmother, who was quite a coin collected herself. .....Ahh childhood memories, a warmth and tear at the same time
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I am now 60, and I was not numismatically aware at age 5 in 1959. I do, however, remember my first Kennedy half and my first clad coin. And with great longing for the old days, I remember opening rolls of dimes and seeing a sparse smattering of clad reeding among the many, many silvers. It was the clad that was exciting. If only I had known Gresham's law.
Whit
<< <i>Good morning, everyone:
I am now 60, and I was not numismatically aware at age 5 in 1959. I do, however, remember my first Kennedy half and my first clad coin. And with great longing for the old days, I remember opening rolls of dimes and seeing a sparse smattering of clad reeding among the many, many silvers. It was the clad that was exciting. If only I had known Gresham's law.
Whit >>
I open rolls today and see a very occasional silver and get very excited. Indeed, how times change.
I do remember the new Clad Quarter in 1965,
I remember my dad saying it felt "greasy"... :-)
LM-ANA3242-CSNS308-MSNS226-ICTA
The novelty of a new coin wore off in about 3 minutes.
"Keep your malarkey filter in good operating order" -Walter Breen
Lafayette Grading Set
WS
The only bad advice my Dad ever gave me was when he said about the Indian Head Cents in that pouch, "If I were you, I'd clean those up and put them in a coin album of some kind".
Pete
Louis Armstrong
impressed as I saved a few rolls and still have them today.
bob
Don't know where the coin went but I have managed to hold on to the wife.
Skip
Dam! I am getting old.
I wasn't even around when coinage went from silver to clad ......
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
For me the minute I saw one I wanted more of them, they look so much nicer than the memorials!
I don't remember where I first saw the 59 cent, but I do remember my reaction: ugly, ugly, ugly.
I read that the reverse of the cent was changing in The Weekly Reader which in those days was a four or six page newspaper that was printed for elementary school students. I think the subscription rate was 50 cents a semester. At any rate after reading that article I set out grab every 1959 cent that I could find in circulation. I found probably five or six of them and carried them around in my shirt pocket. I remember losing a couple of them from my pocket while I was running the bases in a pick-up playground baseball game at school.
During that same spring I bought my first medal. The small version of the Delaware Tercentennial celebration at the gift shop in the John Dickenson Mansion, which located outside of Dover, Delaware. I didn't know at the time, but that piece was left over from the celebration that had been held in 1938! I bought it for the original issue price of 50 cents. Today that piece is listed as a So-Called Dollar.
That Christmas my Uncle John gave me the 13th edition of the Red Book and the Whitman cent folders for the years 1909 to 1940 and 1941 to 1959. My real collecting days began with there.
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
of collecting under my belt and my buffalo nickel collection was nearly half done. My
frioends were more excited about the new cent because they collected them and I col-
lected only buffalos in those days. There was almost as much talk about Joseph Stalin's
initials on the new fangled Roosevelt dime as there was about the new penny. In the
newspaper at least one pundit referred to it as the "streetcar penny".
It's hard to fathom that was 56 years ago and that the coin is as unpopular now as it
was then; perhaps moreso. Killing this less than worthless denomination might not even
spur interest in collecting it.
<< <i>Just wanted to let all of you know....YOU ARE ALL OLD >>
. Well, maybe. But, we lived through interesting times. Kennedy, the space Race, Hippies, the Beatles....we may be old but the ride has been awesome