Home U.S. Coin Forum
Options

Dealers....Please tell us some cool stories.

ldhairldhair Posts: 7,441 ✭✭✭✭✭
I thought it might be fun if you guys could share some stories of coins or collections that walk in your door.

We all hear the stories where the customer is disappointed to learn his holdings have little real value.

Maybe stories where the customer has a treasure and does not know.
What's the coolest coin you had to watch walk back out the door.image
Larry

Comments

  • Options
    ShamikaShamika Posts: 18,785 ✭✭✭✭
    This could be a really great thread.

    Buyer and seller of vintage coin boards!
  • Options
    mrearlygoldmrearlygold Posts: 17,858 ✭✭✭
    I was offered an 1800 Bust Dollar years ago for around 30 G's. It was in a MS-64 holder. I didn't have the 30 G's to pay for the coin and so I offered it to a couple of now famous west coast Bust dollar collectors for 33,500. The collector told me emphatically he did not necessarily agree with the grade and I said "oh no the coin is an upgrade". He disagreed and I finally said "please follow my lead on this one and buy it, let me send it somewhere and resubmit it".

    He agreed and I sent it to Dallas and was told in Dallas that if they cracked the coin out and resubmitted it it woud come back in a 63 holder! FLUSTERED now I said " please just crack it and send it in"..

    Imagine how happy we all were when it came back a few days later........................in a MS-65 holderimage



    Tom
  • Options
    ShamikaShamika Posts: 18,785 ✭✭✭✭


    << <i>received a partial original ROLL! I think it contained 30 + pieces of choice unc. 1858 Half Dimes! >>


    image
    Buyer and seller of vintage coin boards!
  • Options
    PutTogetherPutTogether Posts: 2,157 ✭✭✭
    ttt
  • Options
    Awesome stories. I didnt know they rolled coins in the 1850's.
  • Options

    I have several mediocre stories, but no "1804 Dollar" stories. Here's a recent one:

    Our office is in the Bank One building in Grand Rapids, Michigan. We are about 20 feet from the bank vault (safety deposit boxes). Once in awhile people will clean out their safety deposit boxes and bring coins/currency to us for a verbal opinion. The bank staff usually recommends their clients to us.

    Several months ago, the bank brought an elderly lady to our office with 4 rolls of Indian Cents. They had belonged to her husband and she had forgotten about them. He passed away 20 years earlier. I began opening the rolls....one at a time. The first roll: 50 common dates/common condition coins worth $1 each. Next roll: same thing. Third roll: same thing. She seemed disappointed and discouraged. Perhaps her husband had told her that the old coppers were valuable and she had expectations?

    Well, when I opened the fourth roll my mouth dropped to my feet. It was a roll of mixed date Indians that were ALL UNCIRCULATED, including some early dates. Well, all were uncirculated except for one: an 1877 in Choice VF. When I told her what the coins were worth she smiled from ear-to-ear and you could just feel her happiness. She said that she wanted to keep the coins for awhile, but would sell them to us in the future. I will never forget the look on her face.
    www.jaderarecoin.com - Updated 6/8/06. Many new coins added!

    Our eBay auctions - TRUE auctions: start at $0.01, no reserve, 30 day unconditional return privilege & free shipping!
  • Options


    << <i>I have several mediocre stories, but no "1804 Dollar" stories. Here's a recent one:

    Our office is in the Bank One building in Grand Rapids, Michigan. We are about 20 feet from the bank vault (safety deposit boxes). Once in awhile people will clean out their safety deposit boxes and bring coins/currency to us for a verbal opinion. The bank staff usually recommends their clients to us.

    Several months ago, the bank brought an elderly lady to our office with 4 rolls of Indian Cents. They had belonged to her husband and she had forgotten about them. He passed away 20 years earlier. I began opening the rolls....one at a time. The first roll: 50 common dates/common condition coins worth $1 each. Next roll: same thing. Third roll: same thing. She seemed disappointed and discouraged. Perhaps her husband had told her that the old coppers were valuable and she had expectations?

    Well, when I opened the fourth roll my mouth dropped to my feet. It was a roll of mixed date Indians that were ALL UNCIRCULATED, including some early dates. Well, all were uncirculated except for one: an 1877 in Choice VF. When I told her what the coins were worth she smiled from ear-to-ear and you could just feel her happiness. She said that she wanted to keep the coins for awhile, but would sell them to us in the future. I will never forget the look on her face. >>




    Nice to hear these kinds of stories for a change, instead of the usual "How I ripped off the old lady" stories.
  • Options
    ldhairldhair Posts: 7,441 ✭✭✭✭✭
    JadeRareCoin
    Now thats the kind of story I love to here.
    All great stories.

    Thanks
    Larry

  • Options
    We had a plumber come to our house over a clog. He was delayed getting paid at the last visit where a couple had been fighting. Long story short-- seeing me reading Coin World-- he asked if the 1969 Mint set he had was worth anything (No) or the coin he'd fished at the first house where they'd been so rude-- It was a 1795 Dollar (a bit darkly toned!!!) but with some luster still there!! I gave him the CoinWorld and when he said NO CHARGE--he got the Cardinal Collection Catelog too--A bad day turned great for all concerned!!image
    morgannut2
  • Options
    topstuftopstuf Posts: 14,803 ✭✭✭✭✭
    ....I.....got a 1804 doller story.....

    See, we were a SMALL dealer in Sacramento. So da story ain't about the REAL 1804 dollar.

    OUR STORY was that one day the COPS called me and asked if I would be in to talk about an 1804 dollar.
    It was my pawn detail guy and it seems that the local SLEAZE......who had his license jerked (but still hung around the shop that was now being run by his WIFE) had made some folderol deal with a local guy to sell him an 1804 dollar for ............. $30,000
    The cop wanted to know if that wasn't an awful rare coin for that price and I told him yes.
    Whatever transpired, the guy didn't get burned and Mr. Sleaze went back to his practice of telling folks that although he couldn't BUY any jewelry for them, he could SELL it to SOMEONE ELSE for them.

    So I called the law again and it finally stopped.

    The End
  • Options
    bump
    Greg Cohen

    Senior Numismatist

    Legend Rare Coin Auctions
  • Options
    ldhairldhair Posts: 7,441 ✭✭✭✭✭
    Wow. I forgot all about this old thread. Some cool stories.
    Larry

  • Options
    Is a part of the thread missing? I see Shamika reference a post about 1858 Half Dimes, but I don't see it in the thread?
    image
    To support LordM's European Trip, click here!
  • Options
    mrearlygoldmrearlygold Posts: 17,858 ✭✭✭
    This thread is almost antique
  • Options
    ldhairldhair Posts: 7,441 ✭✭✭✭✭
    Almost?image
    Larry

  • Options
    NumisOxideNumisOxide Posts: 11,037 ✭✭✭✭✭


    << <i>Is a part of the thread missing? I see Shamika reference a post about 1858 Half Dimes, but I don't see it in the thread? >>


    Was wondering the same thing.image
  • Options
    lordmarcovanlordmarcovan Posts: 45,020 ✭✭✭✭✭
    I've trotted this one out a time or two, but it's a fun story I never tire of telling. Saw it with my own two eyes while I was helping out in a coin shop.

    (Carl Wohlforth has reprinted it on his website- thanks, Carl!)

    I call it "Poetic Justice: The Scammer Who Scammed Himself".

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

  • Options
    CaptHenwayCaptHenway Posts: 33,864 ✭✭✭✭✭
    About five years ago Bob Greenstein and I sat down with a gentleman that had some coins that had been left to his wife by her father. Everything in envelopes wrapped in t hat old "anti-tarnish" paper. Not opened in decades. They had no idea what they had.
    The first thing we opened was a 1936 Proof set. Just kept getting better and better. Nice 1877 cent, nice SVDB, nice type. We made copious notes, did the math and told the man that the collection was worth some figure starting with $47,000.
    The man was overwhelmed, and said that he had to call his wife. We handed him a phone and he called her with the good news. When he was done he hung up and asked me. "So how much will you give me for it?" He thought that the number I gave him was retail.
    I looked at Bob, Bob looked at me and I told the man "You don't understand. We will pay you $47xxx for the collection." He almost fell off the chair, and said "I gotta call my wife again."
    We bought the collection.
    TD
    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.
  • Options
    coindeucecoindeuce Posts: 13,510 ✭✭✭✭✭
    I used to frequent a B & M in my hometown about ten years ago. The business relocated about 8 years ago. Before that ocurred I was in the store on an occasion when the dealer seemed somewhat preoccupied. It soon became apparent why that was, when Gaston Dibello's son strolled in with a satchel...

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

  • Options
    RollermanRollerman Posts: 1,907 ✭✭✭✭✭
    I'm not a dealer, but I have heard some great stories from some dealers who I consider friends.
    I'll tell one and if this thread stays alive, I will tell a couple more.
    Several years back, a guy comes into the store and he has a nice selection of gold coins to sell, $16,000+ worth. As my dealer friend was handing him the check, the seller asked if my dealer friend was interested in buying more. "How much more?", my dealer friend asked.
    "I have about 3 times this much yet." came the reply.
    It seems the seller had bought an old "fix it upper" from a state auction. A old gent passed away, and had no relatives and no will. When the seller (of the gold) and the buyer of the old house, finally got around to digging up the flower beds, he hit several PVC capped pipes that all contained gold coins.
    Hows that for a "circulation find"?
    Pete
    "Ain't None of Them play like him (Bix Beiderbecke) Yet."
    Louis Armstrong
  • Options
    Great stories, keep 'em coming
  • Options
    VeepVeep Posts: 1,504 ✭✭✭✭
    A few years back, I appraised a single gold coin for a lady. It was nothing special and she kept it. A couple of months later, a friend of hers calls to say that she had her father's collection that she was interested in having evaluated. I show-up to see a few albums on the coffee table. There were proof Shield Nickels, proof Three Cent Nickels, proof Two Cent Pieces, Commemorative Halves, and on and on. I picked-up an album of circulated Standing Lib. Quarters and was telling her about them, mentioning how valuable it would be if she had the 1916. The next album of SLQs HAD the 1916 and it was gorgeous!!! I almost fainted and said, "You've got it!" That coin slabbed as MS66 and sold at FUN for $30K. The 1927-S was MS65 too and there were a few others as nice as those.

    That collection also yielded 4,000+ "V" Nickels including an 1885, 3,000+ Buffalo Nickels, including a 3-Leg XF45, every Indian Cent, a box of Large Cents, Type Coins and on and on. I worked on that collection off and on for a few weeks, eventually sending about 100 coins to PCGS where we sold them at FUN for strong prices. Boy, she was happy and I had the experience of a lifetime.
    "Let me tell ya Bud, you can buy junk anytime!"
  • Options
    UtahCoinUtahCoin Posts: 5,366 ✭✭✭✭✭
    This old thing came in a couple of years ago......


    image
    I used to be somebody, now I'm just a coin collector.
    Recipient of the coveted "You Suck" award, April 2009 for cherrypicking a 1833 CBHD LM-5, and April 2022 for a 1835 LM-12, and again in Aug 2012 for picking off a 1952 FS-902.
  • Options
    guitarwesguitarwes Posts: 9,308 ✭✭✭

    Veep.........what an awesome experience that must have been!

    UtahCoin.........that thing is neat! A shame about the coins though, but still really neat!
    @ Elite CNC Routing & Woodworks on Facebook. Check out my work.
    Too many positive BST transactions with too many members to list.

Leave a Comment

BoldItalicStrikethroughOrdered listUnordered list
Emoji
Image
Align leftAlign centerAlign rightToggle HTML viewToggle full pageToggle lights
Drop image/file