Options
FOUND IN CHANGE SURVEY

I don't know if this has been done before.
Just wanted to find out what's the oldest coin you have ever found or received in change ?
For me it was a 1910 Lincoln cent
Just wanted to find out what's the oldest coin you have ever found or received in change ?
For me it was a 1910 Lincoln cent
0
Comments
Steve
No S or VDB.
My friend found a 31-S wheatie
Gonna get me a $50 Octagonal someday. Some. Day.
Great transactions with oih82w8, JasonGaming, Moose1913.
My wife had to break open the rolls and count them, after they were in the register, she asked her boss to let her exchange them for 2 paper dollars, he said OK, but to split them up with the people on the floor.
She came home with 13 buffs, mostly worn...but then again I did not see the other ones either.
"Keep your malarkey filter in good operating order" -Walter Breen
https://www.pcgs.com/setregistry/gold/liberty-head-2-1-gold-major-sets/liberty-head-2-1-gold-basic-set-circulation-strikes-1840-1907-cac/alltimeset/268163
"Jesus died for you and for me, Thank you,Jesus"!!!
--- If it should happen I die and leave this world and you want to remember me. Please only remember my opening Sig Line."Jesus died for you and for me, Thank you,Jesus"!!!
--- If it should happen I die and leave this world and you want to remember me. Please only remember my opening Sig Line.The oldest silver coin I ever found was a 1902-O dime when I was a paperboy on the early 70s.
Wife is a cashier and she brought home a 1867 shield nickel from her till a couple months back
Steve
That is a crazy cool find !
Michael Kittle Rare Coins --- 1908-S Indian Head Cent Grading Set --- No. 1 1909 Mint Set --- Kittlecoins on Facebook --- Long Beach Table 448
https://www.omnicoin.com/collection/colind?page=1&sort=sort&sale=1&country=0
Legit change finds, my best have been a 1909-VDB (no S) in change about 15 years ago and, just a few months ago, a Standing Liberty Quarter (no date) from a toll booth in Pennsylvania. That one really blew me away.
In the last quarter of the 20th century, it was not too unusual to find a buffalo nickel or an IHC. In 2016, I rarely pay with cash and even more rarely get change back in coins.
RYK: I am going to disagree with you about this.
It would have been EXTREMELY unusual.
I started seriously searching coins/change in the early 1970s and was exposed to a lot of it since I had to have change as a paperboy, and I never found an IHC, and only found a few Buffs, maybe 2 and they were dateless.
Perhaps geographic differences account for this, who knows.
Lafayette Grading Set
Keeper of the VAM Catalog • Professional Coin Imaging • Prime Number Set • World Coins in Early America • British Trade Dollars • Variety Attribution
Successful BST transactions with: SilverEagles92; Ahrensdad; Smitty; GregHansen; Lablade; Mercury10c; copperflopper; whatsup; KISHU1; scrapman1077, crispy, canadanz, smallchange, robkool, Mission16, ranshdow, ibzman350, Fallguy, Collectorcoins, SurfinxHI, jwitten, Walkerguy21D, dsessom.
Years ago, helping a friend dig near his house, I found an 1818 cent. By prior agreement I was to keep all money I found while digging. That was it. Earlier my father gave me his dug up find and a classmate gave me his. They were both 1818 cents.
Cool. I've seen an 1818 cent dug up at my old high school (which was established in 1788).
I of course did not include detector finds in my "oldest" tally- the 1909 cent was the oldest I've found in change.
Oldest coin I've found (not in change) was a ca. 395 AD Roman bronze.
Oldest dated coin (with an actual date on the coin itself) was a 1738 British halfpenny.
Whatever you are, be a good one. ---- Abraham Lincoln
[URL=http://s1296.photobucket.com/user/stash38/media/A001 - 20150728_193214 2_zpscrbjtnxh.jpg.html]
1865 3 cent nickel taken by me as a dime while a toll collector early 70s Garden State Parkway
1865 Three cent nickel 'given' to me as a dime by a toll collector in the mid 70's on the NYS thruway. As a matter of fact, it was a love token with a 'B' neatly engraved on the reverse. I guess it was meant for "thebeav"......
Growing up in the 60's in small-town Oklahoma and working as an automotive fueling specialist (gas pump jockey), I often received obsolete coins that dated back to seated Liberties and occasionally even a bust coin or two. The oldest that I remember was a worn out 1817 half. (NOT the 17/4 overdate though ) Later, after college, I went back to said small town and asked a couple of elderly gentlemen who had been regular customers if they had been "priming the pump" so to speak and seeking a new collector. Never could get either to admit it but I still think so.
I now do the same thing. It is really cool to see the look when you spend a large cent or cull silver. Who knows...maybe the next Bustchaser is out there right now. I have spent half cents and large cents back to the 1830s. Two centers are always fun although it is getting tougher to find them in junk boxes..
In those days most bags were from the US government. One in ten would be audited at the Fed. This was an audited bag and maybe the auditor swapped his pocket piece.
At that time and place, it was most unusual to find a Peace dollar in one of the bags..
I was a cashier for about three years in the late '90's. During that time I pulled out 300-400 wheat pennies (including many teens), 4-5 Indians cents, a couple of dateless Buffalo nickels, many war nickels, a couple of dozen Roosevelt and Mercury Dimes, a few barber dimes, 10 or so Washington quarters, and several 40% and 90% half dollars. BUT, my then girlfriend and now wife that worked at a different store called me and told me she found a coin I needed to look at and she trumped all of my finds with an 1857 Flying Eagle cent in VF. I couldn't believe it.
Any woman with the ability to find Flying Eagles in change, you should marry her!
And, yes, that IHC still holds a prominent spot in my blue Whitman folder to this date!!
Looking for Top Pop Mercury Dime Varieties & High Grade Mercury Dime Toners.
About a week ago, a cashier at my store pulled a heavily corroded 1920-D Buffalo nickel from the til.
every treasure on Earth
to be young at heart?
And as rich as you are,
it's much better by far,
to be young at heart!