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If you are a Shop Owner or a grunt like me, what unusual items have come across the counter??

keetskeets Posts: 25,351 ✭✭✭✭✭
One of the benefits of working full-time in a B&M is that there always seems to be some unusual item that shows up. I am in NEOhio and it amazes me what is out there, some known and in the hands of collectors, other stuff in the hands of heirs who don't really have a clue.



Over the past 1-2 Years we've bought Gold coins from the 17th Century, French and British medal from 1700-1900 which included a King George coronation medal, a group of Paramount Dollars, complete Sets of slabbed Buffalo Nickels and SLQ's, almost complete Sets of Morgan Dollars and a near score on an MS65 Set of Classic Commems.



There are lots of other really great coins that "walk in" with no warning and we are a small shop. I should also mention that we are a Pawn Shop which means the strange and unusual get offered to us. That can catch me off guard, like the time a woman was offering a Breast Pump!!! And no, I didn't ask her to show us how it worked, we declined but thanked her for stopping in. There was also one guy that came in and wanted to know if we'd buy an Elephant tusk.



So, who cares to come clean on some oddball things that have been offered to you at your shop?? I'm sure with this mix of members there are bound to be some real Lou Lou's.



Al H.

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Comments

  • BAJJERFANBAJJERFAN Posts: 31,615 ✭✭✭✭✭
    be bop a lu lu
    theknowitalltroll;
  • Jinx86Jinx86 Posts: 3,729 ✭✭✭✭✭
    Had a set of sterling silver elephants come in a few weeks ago they weighed 50oz each and were very well made. The things I hate to see come in are massive estates of coins that are mostly junk, last large appraisal I did ended up being $35K in collectors coins and $15K in face value rolls of circ change.

    Bought a Breitling watch last month, now in my personal collection. Its a Korean War(i think) era pocket watch/stop watch, a navigator's pieces from the US military.
  • BroadstruckBroadstruck Posts: 30,497 ✭✭✭✭✭
    I was recently offered a collection of fancy carved smoking pipes as a partial trade.



    I passed and instead gave the collector extended terms to sell them on his own.
    To Err Is Human.... To Collect Err's Is Just Too Much Darn Tootin Fun!
  • GreeniejrGreeniejr Posts: 1,321 ✭✭✭
    On the gross side, we had someone bring in a 50 gallon Rubbermaid tub of coins that they had mixed 4-5 bags of US90% mixed in. That wouldn't have been bad if the tub had not been re purposed from being their cats bathroom without cleaning it. I nearly threw up going through it and replaced my clothes afterwards.
    On the weird side, someone came in with a 5 oz 14 kt gold ring that was in the shape of the devil with ruby eyes. The woman who brought it in said it was a gift from an ex-boyfriend. I can't imagine why it was her ex.
  • Klif50Klif50 Posts: 795 ✭✭✭✭
    I worked in a coin shop in Laurel, Maryland from 1976 to 1982 and endured the big gold and silver boom and bust. At the time we were buying sterling silver over the counter as fast as we could weigh and smash it for the smelter. A lady brought in a cremation urn and it felt heavy so I opened it and it was full of cremates in a plastic bag. I told her I couldn't buy it since it had an occupant. She asked me if she could use the bathroom. I said sure. She went back, came back out and threw away the plastic bag and had flushed the ashed down the commode. I asked her why she did that and she said she hated the SoB anyway. I bought the urn and paid her close to 400 bucks for it but was creeped out the whole time.

    As soon as she walked in an old gentleman walked in and he had a cloth tobacco sack. I figured coins or something. He emptied the bag on the counter top and there were 30 gold teeth he had taken out of dead Japanese soldiers after some big World War II battle. I had to get out the dental tools and pick all the teeth parts out of the gold, weighed up the dental gold and he walked out with a couple hundred bucks. Took a lot of hand washing on my part to feel clean enough to eat with my hands again.

    Did have one family come in with granddads coin and stamp collection. Lots of early gold, PL 95-s Morgan and tons of early proofs. He also had sheets of the Zep stamps, all 3 denominations plus a sheet of the baby zep (C18 if you are into that). Neatest thing was a shield that contained examples of all the different kinds of fractional currency. Evidently they were used in banks to check for counterfeits when someone wanted their dime for the paper. It's the only one I had ever seen and it was quite expensive at that time.

    Lots of other stories but those are the ones that stick in my mind the most
  • rickoricko Posts: 98,724 ✭✭✭✭✭
    Wow... cool stories....this is as good as the "Why dealers drink" threads.... Cheers, RickO
  • nutmegnutmeg Posts: 345 ✭✭

    Yes those fractional shields are rare. I've only seen three of them, two not for sale.
    I think there were two different types: One with a pink background and one with a green background.
  • stevebensteveben Posts: 4,666 ✭✭✭✭✭
    Originally posted by: keets

    ... like the time a woman was offering a Breast Pump!!! And no, I didn't ask her to show us how it worked...





    sounds like a missed opportunity.

  • TwoSides2aCoinTwoSides2aCoin Posts: 44,993 ✭✭✭✭✭
    7 years in a B&M has been a lesson in humility.
  • Wabbit2313Wabbit2313 Posts: 7,268 ✭✭✭✭✭
    Originally posted by: Klif50
    A lady brought in a cremation urn and it felt heavy so I opened it and it was full of cremates in a plastic bag. I told her I couldn't buy it since it had an occupant. She asked me if she could use the bathroom. I said sure. She went back, came back out and threw away the plastic bag and had flushed the ashed down the commode. I asked her why she did that and she said she hated the SoB anyway.




    This is so sick and so funny all at the same time!
  • CaptHenwayCaptHenway Posts: 33,777 ✭✭✭✭✭
    Was working the counter one day when a guy came in with a gold tooth that had still-liquid blood on it. I declined to make the purchase.
    Numismatist. 54 year member ANA. Former ANA Senior Authenticator. Winner of four ANA Heath Literary Awards; three Wayte and Olga Raymond Literary Awards; Numismatist of the Year Award 2009, and ANA Lifetime Achievement Award 2020. Also won the PNG's Robert Friedberg Award for "The Enigmatic Lincoln Cents of 1922," Available now from Whitman or Amazon.
  • PerryHallPerryHall Posts: 47,487 ✭✭✭✭✭
    Originally posted by: CaptHenway

    Was working the counter one day when a guy came in with a gold tooth that had still-liquid blood on it. I declined to make the purchase.




    I wonder if he needed some quick cash and pulled his own tooth. I remember the story you told about the guy that brought in the 1000 oz silver bar that he painted green so he could hide it in plain sight as a door stop.

    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

  • cladkingcladking Posts: 29,898 ✭✭✭✭✭
    I used to go into a lot of shops and ask to see the "misc box". Most dealers have a little box of odd ball stuff they have no idea what to do with. I'd go through and identify stuff for them and make an offer on things I needed. Oftimes I'd have no idea myself what it was and would acquire it anyway.



    So... ...I have some oddball collections from telephone tokens to '30's era amusement tokens as well as strange coin and other collections. Some of my favorite items come from coin collectors' "decoy collections". Many coin collectors keep a book of various unimaginable doodads and odds and ends (along with cheap old coins) with "rare", "valuable", "$20,000" and other misleading information on the inserts. The thinking is thieves who bust in and look in the most obvious place will take the loot and run. It seems to work sometimes since these can be the only thing that walks into the shop. Of course heirs can bring them in too.



    Anyhoo, I've got my own misc box that I call "the Mother of Collections" since every once in a while something new can be identified from it.



    One of these days I'm going to put together the next collection from it which will be token and medal planchets (I think).



    Generalism is a hoot but it can be confusing sometimes. image
    tempus fugit extra philosophiam.
  • Mission16Mission16 Posts: 1,413 ✭✭✭
    I would love to be in your position.
    5 years ago or so, I went to appraise a coin and stamp collection and ended up buying 20,000 board feet of OLD growth cypress lumber.
  • hchcoinhchcoin Posts: 4,842 ✭✭✭✭✭
    Great stories. Keep them coming.
  • RichieURichRichieURich Posts: 8,620 ✭✭✭✭✭
    Interesting thread.



    I keep waiting for one of you guys to find me a 1923-D or 1930-D Soviet-issued Mercury dime!

    An authorized PCGS dealer, and a contributor to the Red Book.

  • coindeucecoindeuce Posts: 13,507 ✭✭✭✭✭
    I had a guy in today who was selling his cache of 90% silver coins. He also plunked this large wooden "objet d'art" on the counter and said I have no idea what this is. It was an intricately carved caricature of a gnome's head, with a large hook shaped truncation and a long wooden lever handle extending out from the base of the back of the gnome's head. As I picked it up and flipped it upside down, I could see a cavity carved into the head above the lever that was a perfect fit for a walnut. Yep! A hand crafted walnut cracker ! image It was crafted to make the gnome's lower jaw close as the nut shell is cracked open.



    The most unusual ?

    Probably the guy who walked in and proceeded to pull a complete set of loose 1901 Proof Gold coins from his pants pocket. image



    BTW keets, you're not a grunt and neither am I. image

    "Everything is on its way to somewhere. Everything." - George Malley, Phenomenon
    http://www.american-legacy-coins.com

  • mirabelamirabela Posts: 5,196 ✭✭✭✭✭
    This is fantastic. Keep them coming.

    I used to go into a lot of shops and ask to see the "misc box". Most dealers have a little box of odd ball stuff they have no idea what to do with. I'd go through and identify stuff for them and make an offer on things I needed. Oftimes I'd have no idea myself what it was and would acquire it anyway.


    ^^ Totally agree. One of my favorite guys lets me do this now and then, and I've come away with some fascinating, weird stuff.
    mirabela
  • ebaybuyerebaybuyer Posts: 2,984 ✭✭✭
    lets not let this thread die
    regardless of how many posts I have, I don't consider myself an "expert" at anything
  • mannie graymannie gray Posts: 7,259 ✭✭✭✭✭
    The tooth tales creep me out a little bit, but the cremation urn story was really funny!
  • lordmarcovanlordmarcovan Posts: 45,020 ✭✭✭✭✭
    Originally posted by: PerryHall

    Originally posted by: CaptHenway

    Was working the counter one day when a guy came in with a gold tooth that had still-liquid blood on it. I declined to make the purchase.




    I wonder if he needed some quick cash and pulled his own tooth. I remember the story you told about the guy that brought in the 1000 oz silver bar that he painted green so he could hide it in plain sight as a door stop.




    This reportedly happened in the shop I once helped out in, though not in my presence. A man supposedly came in and asked if they bought dental gold. At the time they did, so upon hearing that, he went back out of the shop, and in full view of the front windows, he got into his car, spoke to a woman in the car (presumably his wife), went into her mouth, yanked out a gold tooth or two with a pair of pliers, and brought the bloody proceeds in for sale.



    I did once see a dealer banging dental gold with a ball-peen hammer to bust out all the old amalgam and tooth material and flatten it out. Ugh. You'd wanna wear goggles when doing that. Not the sort of thing I'd like to have fly into my eye!



    As to big silver bars, the dealer I worked for once had me take an 80-pound bar to a metal shop to be sawed in half, since the USPS max weight was 70 pounds and he needed to ship it to the smelter. The guys in the metal shop were kind of fascinated by the whole thing when they put int on a big band saw, and so was I. I don't think they charged us anything. I told 'em to keep the shavings. Forget how much got wasted in the sawing.



    Another story I was told (possibly apocryphal, but who knows) was about a customer who brought in a high-AU or Mint State Flowing Hair dollar, and cheerfully mentioned, "I just Tarn-X-ed it for you, so it's all nice and shiny now." He was not happy when told he'd just probably reduced the coin's value by five figures.



    Last but not least, there was an interesting bulk Buffalo nickel purchase I personally witnessed.



    I call the tale ...



    Poetic Justice: The Scammer Who Scammed Himself



    A few coin club newsletters even asked permission to reprint it.

    Collector since 1976. On the CU forums here since 2001.

  • lordmarcovanlordmarcovan Posts: 45,020 ✭✭✭✭✭
    Originally posted by: Mission16

    I would love to be in your position.

    5 years ago or so, I went to appraise a coin and stamp collection and ended up buying 20,000 board feet of OLD growth cypress lumber.





    Timber is and has always been one of the primary cash crops here in coastal SE Georgia. They used to collect the logs together into giant timber rafts upriver and float 'em down to coastal ports like Darien. Some must have sunk in the process somehow, because there are now people who specialize in bringing up these 100+ year old sunken logs. It's apparently worth their while. I guess the stuff that grows nowadays doesn't get as big as the old virgin timber that was cut in the 1800s?

    Collector since 1976. On the CU forums here since 2001.

  • keetskeets Posts: 25,351 ✭✭✭✭✭
    all the "dental gold" stories creep me out because it's one of the tasks I inherited. the easiest way I have found to remove the non-gold is with a torch, then a slight tap and maybe a pick with something sharp. it is quick and less dangerous but can sometimes smell.image



    maybe the hardest thing for me to assess is Foreign and Ancient coins. last week a husband/wife came in with three Silver hammered coins(drachmas?) they said were from about 400B.C. and the best I could do was direct them to Heritage. they said they had inherited them from the wife's father and placed a value of $10-12k on each one.



    about three months ago two women showed up with what we dubbed "The Cat Piss Hoard" of foreign coins, about 25 binders full of 2x2'd coins that were meticulously ID'd in alphabetical order. it was another inheritance that I think was stored in a damp basement and the cats found them!!! it took us several hours to go through them, at one point I had to get up and find something to put under my nose, Listerine was the solution.



    it was nasty, the girl who runs our jewelry counter refused to help and she's a cat owner.image
  • PerryHallPerryHall Posts: 47,487 ✭✭✭✭✭
    Originally posted by: lordmarcovan

    This reportedly happened in the shop I once helped out in, though not in my presence. A man supposedly came in and asked if they bought dental gold. At the time they did, so upon hearing that, he went back out of the shop, and in full view of the front windows, he got into his car, spoke to a woman in the car (presumably his wife), went into her mouth, yanked out a gold tooth or two with a pair of pliers, and brought the bloody proceeds in for sale.






    They could have been drug addicts who were really desperate for a fix. Really sad.









    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

  • PerryHallPerryHall Posts: 47,487 ✭✭✭✭✭
    Originally posted by: ebaybuyer

    lets not let this thread die




    Agree. This is a great thread with a lot of interesting stories......a few of which are quite disturbing.

    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

  • thebeavthebeav Posts: 4,101 ✭✭✭✭✭
    Originally posted by: keets
    all the "dental gold" stories creep me out because it's one of the tasks I inherited. the easiest way I have found to remove the non-gold is with a torch, then a slight tap and maybe a pick with something sharp. it is quick and less dangerous but can sometimes smell.image


    That is the easiest way to remove the amalgam, to be sure, but avoid breathing the 'smell' as it contains the mercury vapor.

    My shop was in an area of large Jewish population. A guy came in with a Nazi dress dagger. Thank God, he had it in a large paper shopping bag. The store was crowded at the time. I was able to examine it while it was in the bag and purchase it without it coming into view.

    Count me among those that would love a fractional shield too !

  • TwoSides2aCoinTwoSides2aCoin Posts: 44,993 ✭✭✭✭✭
    -The guys who started PMG came into the shop, one day. That's not exactly U.S. Coins, but currency related.
    - Buying a PCGS graded AU coin and cracking it out , so it would match the raw couple of $10 gold AU Indians , to fill an order by TDN's request. (first time I felt guilty about cracking a coin out. Okay, maybe the second time. But that's PAR for the course. Not an omen that he's going to have triplets or anything image )
    -Mitch Ernst (Coinhusker) visits were my favorite. Nothing unusual. Straight talk about coins and the business. The ANA and what's new. And that's when I learned about the 'sower' and his affinity to certain things. He is one of my heroes and a fine ambassador.
    -The other day the phone rang. It was a man who just moved to the area. He was looking for a "club" to join. I hope Coinhusker didn't mind me giving out his number.
  • SaorAlbaSaorAlba Posts: 7,593 ✭✭✭✭✭
    "The Cat Piss Hoard" of foreign coins, about 25 binders full of 2x2'd coins that were meticulously ID'd in alphabetical order. it was another inheritance that I think was stored in a damp basement and the cats found them!!! it took us several hours to go through them, at one point I had to get up and find something to put under my nose, Listerine was the solution.



    it was nasty, the girl who runs our jewelry counter refused to help and she's a cat owner.image




    I wonder if you could have them custom slabbed by PCGS as the "Cat Piss Hoard" coins?

  • cladkingcladking Posts: 29,898 ✭✭✭✭✭
    Some of the strangest things I've seen come onto coin shops are the containers in which people haul their booty. These can be almost anything and include wooden dry goods boxes from the 19th century, buckets and pails to almost everything else. My favorite was a nice handcrafted wooden box full of British coins with a dated note inside that it was made of the teak wood from the decking of Lord Admiral Nelson's ship when it was being refurbished in the 19th century.



    They always leave the box.



    The box collectors may have the last laugh on all us. image
    tempus fugit extra philosophiam.
  • TwoSides2aCoinTwoSides2aCoin Posts: 44,993 ✭✭✭✭✭
    True that about the box, CK… there are some neat old boxes.
  • GaCoinGuyGaCoinGuy Posts: 2,848 ✭✭✭✭
    Fun stories. I would love to spend a week in an old-time B&M.

    My one question though is how do you authenticate old gold coins that are loose without damaging them? I know on jewelry you can do tests that involve scratching a small spot, but what about coins?
    imageimage

  • ebaybuyerebaybuyer Posts: 2,984 ✭✭✭
    speaking of the logging industry (for those who are interested) here is the end of an actual marked log from a 19th century Michigan lumber company

    image
    regardless of how many posts I have, I don't consider myself an "expert" at anything
  • ShadyDaveShadyDave Posts: 2,217 ✭✭✭✭✭
    Originally posted by: GaCoinGuy
    Fun stories. I would love to spend a week in an old-time B&M.

    My one question though is how do you authenticate old gold coins that are loose without damaging them? I know on jewelry you can do tests that involve scratching a small spot, but what about coins?


    Maybe one of these or something similar if you own a shop?
  • TPRCTPRC Posts: 3,817 ✭✭✭✭✭
    Originally posted by: GaCoinGuy
    Fun stories. I would love to spend a week in an old-time B&M.

    My one question though is how do you authenticate old gold coins that are loose without damaging them? I know on jewelry you can do tests that involve scratching a small spot, but what about coins?



    There is a machine that does it. I think it is called an XRF analyzer. I had some Celtic gold ring money analyzed to establish composition several years ago.

    Tom

  • ashelandasheland Posts: 24,406 ✭✭✭✭✭
    Very cool thread!
  • ashelandasheland Posts: 24,406 ✭✭✭✭✭
    A B&M I worked at a few years ago, we had a woman come in to inquire about an item (which wasn't gold) and had her purse on the counter.
    When she left I saw what looked like a grain of rice laying where her purse was.
    It moved! It was a maggot!
  • CaptHenwayCaptHenway Posts: 33,777 ✭✭✭✭✭
    Originally posted by: asheland

    A B&M I worked at a few years ago, we had a woman come in to inquire about an item (which wasn't gold) and had her purse on the counter.

    When she left I saw what looked like a grain of rice laying where her purse was.

    It moved! It was a maggot!




    We had one guy that came in for years selling odds and ends when he needed money. Looked like an old college professor (tweedy jacket with leather patches on the elbows, etc.) and an alcoholic.



    Over the years he became shabbier and shabbier, in the same tweed coat, and by the smell either homeless or just totally indifferent to his hygiene. I still treated him with respect, but the last time he came in a flea jumped off of him onto the counter. I picked up the buying pad I was using and smacked the flea before it could disappear into the store, and finished the transaction without either of us mentioning the flea. He never came back.
    Numismatist. 54 year member ANA. Former ANA Senior Authenticator. Winner of four ANA Heath Literary Awards; three Wayte and Olga Raymond Literary Awards; Numismatist of the Year Award 2009, and ANA Lifetime Achievement Award 2020. Also won the PNG's Robert Friedberg Award for "The Enigmatic Lincoln Cents of 1922," Available now from Whitman or Amazon.
  • ashelandasheland Posts: 24,406 ✭✭✭✭✭
    That's pretty bad, a flea! Imagine what's in that coat! yikes...
  • ebaybuyerebaybuyer Posts: 2,984 ✭✭✭
    what ever was in the coat, the flea wanted nothing to do with !
    regardless of how many posts I have, I don't consider myself an "expert" at anything
  • rickoricko Posts: 98,724 ✭✭✭✭✭
    The thread is growing.... If we get enough stories, there could be a book in it for the literary prone among us....image Cheers, RickO

  • WeissWeiss Posts: 9,942 ✭✭✭✭✭
    Not trying to derail, but I'd never heard of those fractional currency shields before. There's one on eBay right now. Somewhat worse for wear, BIN $4750. Auction 171072623166 if you're interested.

    My B&M has a reputation for buying unusual non-coin pieces over the years. I've been in the shop when people have brought in massive ivory sculptures, antique tools, guns, etc.

    I was fortunate enough to pick up three historic newspapers recently and to have sold two of them here. 1791, 1803, and 1862.

    That same seller, a history buff in his mid-80s, is liquidating many of his treasures. One item from that same batch was an indenture from the 1600s. My dealer chose to hold on to it for now. Looked something like this:

    image
    We are like children who look at print and see a serpent in the last letter but one, and a sword in the last.
    --Severian the Lame
  • kazkaz Posts: 9,342 ✭✭✭✭✭
    Originally posted by: SaorAlba

    "The Cat Piss Hoard" of foreign coins, about 25 binders full of 2x2'd coins that were meticulously ID'd in alphabetical order. it was another inheritance that I think was stored in a damp basement and the cats found them!!! it took us several hours to go through them, at one point I had to get up and find something to put under my nose, Listerine was the solution.



    it was nasty, the girl who runs our jewelry counter refused to help and she's a cat owner.image




    I wonder if you could have them custom slabbed by PCGS as the "Cat Piss Hoard" coins?





    LOL, great idea! Having drained numerous cysts, abscesses and other foul appendages to the human body I can say that Vick's Vaporub is the best odor blocker out there. Just a little dab under the nostrils, and a jar lasts forever.



  • DaveWcoinsDaveWcoins Posts: 1,185 ✭✭✭
    Originally posted by: Weiss

    Not trying to derail, but I'd never heard of those fractional currency shields before. There's one on eBay right now. Somewhat worse for wear, BIN $4750. Auction 171072623166 if you're interested.



    My B&M has a reputation for buying unusual non-coin pieces over the years. I've been in the shop when people have brought in massive ivory sculptures, antique tools, guns, etc.



    I was fortunate enough to pick up three historic newspapers recently and to have sold two of them here. 1791, 1803, and 1862.



    That same seller, a history buff in his mid-80s, is liquidating many of his treasures. One item from that same batch was an indenture from the 1600s. My dealer chose to hold on to it for now. Looked something like this:



    image




    That indenture is super cool (as is this whole thread).





    Dave Wnuck. Redbook contributor; long time PNG Member; listed on the PCGS Board of Experts. PM me with your email address to receive my e-newsletter, and visit DaveWcoins.com Find me on eBay at davewcoins
  • shorecollshorecoll Posts: 5,447 ✭✭✭✭✭
    I've told this story before but it's been a while. I had a dealer friend who at the time was 70 or so, about 5`6" and maybe weighed 135#. He called me that he needed help and to meet him at his house (he was a vest pocket guy that worked out of his house). He came cruising down the road about 20 mph with the bed of his little pickup almost scraping the axle. In the back was a 55 gallon drum of Barber halves. Mostly AG, but multiple roll sets. I bought 2 sets, a VG set and a VF set. I didn't have the cash to buy any more. After we got them in the house he was afraid that his dining room table would collapse, or the floor under it would cave in.
    ANA-LM, NBS, EAC
  • mannie graymannie gray Posts: 7,259 ✭✭✭✭✭
    Originally posted by: shorecoll

    I've told this story before but it's been a while. I had a dealer friend who at the time was 70 or so, about 5`6" and maybe weighed 135#. He called me that he needed help and to meet him at his house (he was a vest pocket guy that worked out of his house). He came cruising down the road about 20 mph with the bed of his little pickup almost scraping the axle. In the back was a 55 gallon drum of Barber halves. Mostly AG, but multiple roll sets. I bought 2 sets, a VG set and a VF set. I didn't have the cash to buy any more. After we got them in the house he was afraid that his dining room table would collapse, or the floor under it would cave in.




    Neat story....isn't it strange how deals like that just pop up out of nowhere?
  • mannie graymannie gray Posts: 7,259 ✭✭✭✭✭
    Originally posted by: ricko

    The thread is growing.... If we get enough stories, there could be a book in it for the literary prone among us....image Cheers, RickO





    RickO, actually a damn good idea....could also include coin show stories/interactions/discoveries etc.......

    But besides us, who would buy it? lol
  • pennyanniepennyannie Posts: 3,929 ✭✭✭
    I was at a store 7 or so years ago when a widow brought in about 50 stunning Texas commend that her husband had put in the SDB with all the packaging and paperwork. They were stunning. Pretty sure the dealer got them for 50 bucks each.

    Same dealer that offered me 600 on 100 dollar bags of us 90 percent
    Mark
    NGC registry V-Nickel proof #6!!!!
    working on proof shield nickels # 8 with a bullet!!!!

    RIP "BEAR"
  • keetskeets Posts: 25,351 ✭✭✭✭✭
    before I worked for him, my boss was contacted by a guy that had 20,000+ Wheat Cents that he was offering for sale, all in tubes by date. I was all ready to help him sort/count/check them. when the day came and the guy showed up it was a mess: he had either soaked them in oil before he tubed them or topped off the tubes after they were filled!! we tried to get some through the counter but it only made a mess so we told him to clean them up if he could and we'd still buy them.



    never heard back from the guy.
  • TwoSides2aCoinTwoSides2aCoin Posts: 44,993 ✭✭✭✭✭
    By far, the most angry I ever got was at two finely dressed women who brought me about $600 worth of silver halves. I think silver was about $28 per ounce or so, at the time. The coins were mostly Franklin and Walkers (common dates/ hoarded stuff).

    These women held a candle to me, and while I was trying to buy it at .69 times spot ( .715 is ASW) which I felt was fair, they insisted I pay full price for the silver.
    They were ready to leave , so I upped the bid and bought it at full price.

    Then I began the paper work of recording the seller's name, address, phone, identification, etc.,

    As we neared the end of the transaction I asked these two finely dressed ladies where they came upon the coins.

    One answered : " I am a teller at a bank. And she (pointing to the other woman) is the manager. An old woman came in to make a deposit and these were the coins she wanted to deposit ".

    So I asked politely, "May I ask you what you gave this old woman for her coins on deposit ? "

    She answered proudly, "Face value "

    In light of all that, I should not have found this "unusual" across the counter. I should have expected that's "normal behavior" from all the posts I've read about dealers over the years.
  • GreeniejrGreeniejr Posts: 1,321 ✭✭✭
    I am remembering another ewww situation that I saw in the early 2000s was with a guy walking into the store with a little box of coins. It looked like any of a lot of groups of coins to come in. Inside the box, there were a dozen gold coins and a few platinum coins. Included were several early lunars back when the ox and rat had a big premium. Anyway, all the coins were scratched to high heaven and all of the coins were covered in a thick layer of oily residue. We were not sure what it was but it seemed to be some sort of oil or lubricant not used for cooking or cars. All I can say is they all found their way to the smelter.

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