Oldest US coin still in normal circulation is the......

1939 P nickel. Always "thick on the ground" these ate still found in decent F-VF. Am I right with this? BTW got one a few days ago and it prompted this post. 76 u
Years old!
Years old!
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I even saw a non-collector get quite excited at the coffee shop awhile back when they found a 1930's nickel in their change
Heck, I even got a 1903 Indian head cent in supermarket change since I received such an old nickel.
I've never seen one in circulation, but I've never seen a 1939 nickel either.
The Silver American Eagle Proofs that year were just icing that wasn't on the cake, too.
Yes, they can all be occasionally found, but pre-1960 Jeffs are routine. I filled a coffee can with them, before I quit saving them.
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<< <i>Correct! >>
+1
<< <i>Nickels from the 40's and 50's I see from time to time... >>
I usually get a few late 1940's nickels from time to time.
<< <i>1939 P nickel. Always "thick on the ground" these ate still found in decent F-VF. Am I right with this? BTW got one a few days ago and it prompted this post. 76 u
Years old! >>
Absolutely. I see them too. And try to spend them.
Lance.
out of circulation at least once since the early '70's. This is why they are
in the same condition today that they were 40 years ago.
At least a few 1939 nickels have never been pulled out of circulation by
collectors so have circulated continuously.
Back as a kid in the 60's, I'd pull the Warnicks out and scan for 38's and 50 D's.
The rest went back.
Check out my current listings: https://ebay.com/sch/khunt/m.html?_ipg=200&_sop=12&_rdc=1
As everyone else has said, it's certainly still very possible to find wheat cents from the teens and twenties but I see way more 1939 nickels more than I see those.
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Did Mercury dimes disappear by the mid 1950s?
Note: Interesting as Coin Facts states there were 1,819,717,540 minted and placed into circulation. That's a heap of quarters!
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<< <i>
<< <i>Nickels from the 40's and 50's I see from time to time... >>
I usually get a few late 1940's nickels from time to time. >>
same here more so then the 1950s
<< <i>I'll never understand how that many Wheaties were pulled in such a short time. By the late 80s they were hard to find. Why did anyone care? We'd already been through design changes plenty of times by then.
Did Mercury dimes disappear by the mid 1950s? >>
I was pulling Wheaties from circulation in the mid-1960's. I'd save any before 1940, and the later dates only if they were Fine or better. Mercuries (and Walking Liberty halves) were common until all silver coins began to be hoarded, but most of those found in the mid-'60's were from the 1940's, along with P mints from the '30's. If I found any before 1934, they were nearly always AG-VG.
Jim
I got a dateless Buffalo in change about 10 years ago... does that count?
Stewart Huckaby
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They were still around in Massachusetts as long as silver circulated. Walking Liberty halves were more common than Franklins. About 1960, one third of nickels were buffaloes and one third were war nicks. By 1964 buffaloes were still in circulation here but much fewer. I had reports that the y had disappeared in California by that time. By the way I was disappointed to get a FRB audiited bag of 999 BU 1878 S Morgan dollars and one beat up 1923 Peace in 1963.
Looking for Top Pop Mercury Dime Varieties & High Grade Mercury Dime Toners.
a Lincoln satisfies the question for probably the oldest circulation coin we will find, but if it is dis-allowed because of the change from Wheat reverse to Lincoln Memorial reverse than we must also eliminate the Nickel(and the Memorial Cent for that matter. they are a different design, the Cent with the Shield reverse and the Nickel with the new obverse.
for a continuous design oldest coin it would be the Roosevelt Dime.
<< <i>I think this question has two answers.
a Lincoln satisfies the question for probably the oldest circulation coin we will find, but if it is dis-allowed because of the change from Wheat reverse to Lincoln Memorial reverse than we must also eliminate the Nickel(and the Memorial Cent for that matter. they are a different design, the Cent with the Shield reverse and the Nickel with the new obverse.
for a continuous design oldest coin it would be the Roosevelt Dime. >>
I think that the that the GW quarter (1932-2008) has been around a lil longer than the Roosie dime (1946-2015) . . . Of course they had to go and "spaghetti hair" ol'George
HH
1947-P & D; 1948-D; 1949-P & S; 1950-D & S; and 1952-S.
Any help locating any of these OBW rolls would be gratefully appreciated!
Like ebaybuyer said, those 3s look a lot like 5s unless people look close. That probably helps keep them from being noticed.
I spend them and put them back to work.
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