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What was your first "big" coin buy?
notlogical's post got me thinking about my first big coin. It was either a 17D reverse half or a 36 Buffalo proof. What was yours?
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My first really nice indian cent an 1879 PR65RB
Lincoln cent
ms-63 brown
I never spent more than 7 grand at any one time in my life for a coin or coins, and I have spent as little as five cents for a wheat penny.
To me, each and every one was a "big" coin buy... and even "BIGGER" after I sold it
``https://ebay.us/m/KxolR5
but that was only the beginning
">"http://www.cashcrate.com/5663377"
Dan
">Franklin Halves
">Kennedy Halves
Or this one that I got at 30% of retail: 14/0
Or maybe this one, which I just like: 118/0 Ex: Volker Dube
The BIG COIN was of course the 1877. For a while in the mid 1960s the going retail price for a '77 Indian in Fine was as much as $250.00. But then the market started to drop on them. By the time it fell to $200.00 I had saved just that amount. That 1877 in Fine @ $200 was my first big coin purchase.
The story did not end happily. The coin was OK, but the market for Indian cents. was not. From the late '60's, through the late '70s, the market for Indian cents was terrible. No body wanted them. The retail price on my ’77 Indian fell to as low as $175.00.
As my collecting interests changed I decided to sell my Indian set. All I could get was $390 + a 1964 Proof set. I had spent more than $1,200 in total on it.
It taught me a lesson about fooling around with anything but early coins in the circulated grades. Dealers were always playing games with the grades (buy in low grade; sell in a higher grade), and their eyes glazed over after they evaluated the key date coins in the sets. In other words, you don't get sqat for that carefully selected $4 common date coin in Fine. You might as well fill the hole with a Good from the aspect of getting you money back in a resale.
My Indian cent fiasco did not ruin my interest in coins. I made a lot of money on the Mint State gold coins I purchased as a kid. But it did make me a smarter shopper.
Have a Great Day!
Louis
Jim d
- Marcus Tullius Cicero, 106-43 BC
Ken
YJ
<< <i>My first big coin purchase was an 1856 (s-3) Flyer In PCGS Vf-25 from our own board member John G (gooseIII). I had to strecth to buy it like nothing ever before. It has now long since gone, but got introduced to this forum from that purchase as well as mad e along time freind.
Jim d >>
Thanks Jim!
That '56 flyer was my Second Big coin. I traded my first big coin (a VF35 1916 quarter) for part of that fleagle.
Fly-In Club
My PCGS Registry Sets
Now I am glad i did
I wish I still had that coin.
http://www.ebay.com/sch/rs8199/m.html?_nkw=&_armrs=1&_ipg=&_from=
Death and Taxes" ~~ Ben Franklin
https://www.pcgs.com/setregistry/u-s-coins/mint-sets/1945-mint-set/publishedset/21067
Knutson's 45' Set 2009 Winner
Mine was the Sparkletts bottle full of Morgans, Walkers and Mercury Dimes. Sucker weighed almost 300 lbs
Check out my current listings: https://ebay.com/sch/khunt/m.html?_ipg=200&_sop=12&_rdc=1
Probably about $100 for an 1864-L Indian Head cent in VF or XF quite a few years ago.
<< <i>I know it's not big for many on this forum, but by far my biggest purchase was at the last Baltimore show. 1985-CC in PCGS 63 PL. Looks better to me than the '83-cc in PCGS 64 DMPL my wife bought me. The '85 was $525. >>
I did not realize that Carson City was in business in 1985.
local estate auction of a long-time collector. I could have easily parted some of it out
immediately after the auction as several people were interested in some of the coins.
I was working on a circulated full horn set at the time and this provided a nice boost as
many of the coins either filled holes or upgraded coins for me. I remember it included
a nice 3-leg that slabbed XF45 at PCGS, as well as several XF-AUish teens and 20's
mintmarked coins. One odd thing about the set is that it ran the gamut from AG to
BU, and there would be a great '25-D in AU next to a common '26 in G.
That was probably 15 years ago and I sold the last remianing coin from that set just
this past fall.
Ken
K
It was love at first sight, and not a minute of regret or thought of selling, even when offered twice that
Liberty: Parent of Science & Industry
41 P Walker in 67 @ 2150.00 !
I wound up selling it to someone else who wanted it more than me.
I was going to cross it over into a PCGS holder.
A few years later as a kid, another rather large purchase I made was for an 84 DD Lincoln. I bought that on vacation in Rochester New York from a place called 'Gallery of Coins,' where the dealer had a whole tray of them. His MS65s were $150, and his single MS63 was $115, which was the one I could afford. A couple years ago, I sent that coin into PCGS - and it came back 66 Red! I sold that coin a short time later, and used the money to take a chance on a raw 14-D Indian Eagle on Ebay, which was probably my first big purchase upon returning to the hobby. Spent AUish money on that coin, which is now NGC 63.
While I realize there are many here more vested in coins that I will ever be any time soon, it does strike me as crazy sometimes that some of these little round pieces of metal I own are worth hundreds of dollars. The thing is though, is that it's not like it is money spent on a night out or a vacation - the money is still there. If a coin depareciates, than that amount is really all paid for ownership, not the price I paid. But in most cases, my coins have apprecaited...
<<Mine was a 1937-d 3-legged buffalo in AU55. I'd wanted one since I saw it in a "Silver Spoons" episode as a kid. >>
I remember that episode!! It ran around the same time an episode of 'Murder, She Wrote" focused on an 1804 Silver Dollar.
>>>My Collection
Go BIG or GO HOME. ©Bill
Probably about $75 back in the 70's - when you could buy dinner out for $3
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