Can you remember silver coinage in pocket change?

I remember when I was a kid, my Dad would let me look through his pocket change to pick out silver coinage. Most of it was clad but there was still quite a bit of silver coinage still floating around.
My Dad had a small collection of silver dollars that he had inherited. My mother spent some of them on food without my Dad knowing. This would have been in the late sixties. I don't remember his reaction but I do know financially my parents had it rough.
My Dad had a small collection of silver dollars that he had inherited. My mother spent some of them on food without my Dad knowing. This would have been in the late sixties. I don't remember his reaction but I do know financially my parents had it rough.
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Those were the fun days.
<< <i>I remember when it was all silver. >>
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<< <i>In the sixties it was very common to find silver coinage in pocket change. I remember seeing Standling Liberty Quarters, Walking Liberty Halfs, Franklin Halfs, and Mercury Dimes. >>
if only I was born a few decades earlier!
Positive BST as a seller: Namvet69, Lordmarcovan, Bigjpst, Soldi, mustanggt, CoinHoader, moursund, SufinxHi, al410, JWP
finding a silver coin was just an occasional thing and by the early 1970s next to impossible.
<< <i>Can you remember silver coinage in pocket change? >>
Yes, and it took a few years after 1965 for it to fade away as people saved it.
I also remember when silver dollars circulated in Lake Tahoe.
For us "old timers", what silver coin did you pull out of circulation ( even going thru rolls ) that really blew you away ? I don't mean slicked SLQ's...I mean something nice... not necessarily a rare date ... just a higher grade circulated coin.
My jaw dropped when I found a 1908-P Barber Dime in AU 58 +++ and a 1906-P Barber Quarter in AU 55. These dimes and quarters were not in circulation in the mid 1960's and I found these two while still in High School.
AU Standing Liberty Quarters and Liberty Walking Halves were available with not alot of searching and Buffalo nickels were as common as Jefferson's from the 60's are now.
Yes those were the "good old days" until you talk with my father who picked thru coins with his Dad back in the mid 1920's. Now, those were the "good old days" !!!
~~~~~~~~~~~~
Coin collecting is not a hobby, it's an obsession !
New Barber Purchases
WHen I was a YN, I'd find an occasional indian cent, V nickel or Barber in circulation!
I also remember getting bags of coins from the parking meters. We could put circulated sets together pretty quick with the exception of the keys.
“In matters of style, swim with the current; in matters of principle, stand like a rock." - Thomas Jefferson
My digital cameo album 1950-64 Cameos - take a look!
At that time it was pretty much all silver...
I remember my Dad saying, he did'nt like the new coin's, that they felt "greasy".... Haaaaa
I also remember buying small glass bottle's (6 oz ?) of Coka-Cola out of a 5 cent vending machine,
and once in a while you would get a Buffalo nickel back in change from a dime... Early 60's....
LM-ANA3242-CSNS308-MSNS226-ICTA
I also remember when it was all silver coins(pre 64),also remember some times finding Indian cents in change.Steel cents were spent,there were just to many to save them all,I was just a kid.
Man I'm getting OLD.
Brian
I can see it know, us YNs grow up, the internet is available without a connection or computer, and we're reminiscing about State Quarters and Westward Journey nickels.
-Amanda
I'm a YN working on a type set!
My Buffalo Nickel Website Home of the Quirky Buffaloes Collection!
Proud member of the CUFYNA
PS - All you YN's of today, you do not know how lucky you are. Back then, we did not have the internet for learning about coins. I could not afford Coin World or Numismatic News and there was not a coin shop in town. I only had a old copy of redbook. I looked forward to the short coin column which appeared weekly in the sunday newspaper and I cut it out and saved these columns. The few times that I got a hold of a coin newspaper, that same issue stayed with me for years!
The mercs and well worn SLQ started to disappear rapidly by 1962 which made it difficult to assemble a set. of course, quarters were a lot of money for me so I stuck with the cents, nickels and dimes.
The 1963 and 1964 silver issues were coined in such great quantities that they drove out the older silver coins from circulation in my opinion.
The assasination and issuance of the Kennedy half dollars in my belief sounded the death bell of silver coins. It is my recollection that the public's fascination with the Kennedy half dollars and intensive hoarding of them spilled over to all other silver coinage. The US Mint in vain, tried to keep up with the hoarding demand and finally gave up.
When I was 10 I lost a Merc dime in the yard at my grandparents farm. I remember it so well because I was always losing pennies and dimes and losing this one really ticked me off! After I grew up and got interested in metal detecting and coin collecting I searched that yard and found the Merc that I had lost. Now, just a few more searches to go and I'll be rich.
My EBay Store/Auctions
<< <i>I remember when it was all silver.
Me too!
I spent a lot of silver coins when I was kid. Around 1968, one could go to the bank and get rolls of dimes and quaraters, and roughly half of the coins would be silver. A few dealers were speculating in silver and were offering to pay 108 % of face for 90% silver coins.
Kinda wish that I had saved all of them now.
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etexmike
<< <i>I remember when it was all silver. >>
Heck Syl, Caleb says you probably remember when 3c silvers were still being used
Fast forward to 1976, when I discovered that my 8 and 6 years old son's had gotten into that "old money" and had spent quite a bit of it at the local grocery store (pop, candy and an occassional comic book).
But, in going through my old coins again, my interest was rekindled and I have been more or less active since!! And my boys grew up to be great fellows and not thieves, and that's a plus! <Grin>
Best wishes,
Pete
Louis Armstrong
<< <i>When I was a kid, there wasn't such a thing as clad. I had customers give me silver dollars for tips on my newspaper route at Christmas. >>
Ken your customers were very generous. The most I remember is one of these.
And it wasn't in any plastic back then. And Celeb I'm not that old only as old as the one pictured.
I asked my grandfather decades later why he didn't finish off his sets of Franklins and Washingtons, and he replied, 'I'm still looking!'. Never did find them!
I recall when it was possible to find SLQs in the cash register of the drug store where I worked as a kid. Specifically, I recall the druggist showing me why a SLQ was called a "cowboy quarter" - remember that you other oldies!
Oh well. I also remember when the Kennedy half came out and it seemed like a big deal, my parents really liked them and kept trying to get more.
I remember when clads came around, my mom refered to them as samwich coins. It seemed like everyone liked seeing them, but no one really liked them because they all hated the idea of having worthless coinage.
I remember as a kid seeing wheaties most of the time (I know this is off target but... sue me!) I wish I could go back and look at every coin that went through my hands to see if I spent anything valuable!
<< <i>I also remember when it was all silver coins(pre 64),also remember some times finding Indian cents in change.Steel cents were spent,there were just to many to save them all,I was just a kid.
Man I'm getting OLD.
Brian >>
Your not the only one here. The 43 Lincoln Cents just came out when I was a kid and my Dad helped me collect many, many of them. True also that I didn't know of anything else but Silver Coinage.
You know the ones with the cooler on the back.
Jim
Menomonee Falls Wisconsin USA
http://www.pcgs.com/SetRegistr...dset.aspx?s=68269&ac=1">Musky 1861 Mint Set
<< <i>You know the ones with the cooler on the back >>
One comes down our street every day in the summer. Hate the song it puts out, like the Ice Cream bars even it they are over priced.
Geez, I'm only 40 so I don't remember finding any silver.
TD
WS
Heres one, we had a "Breadman" that would deliver Breads and Baked goods. He also had a Candy tray and for a nickle of a dime get a Huge Candy Bar.
I remember getting Standing walkers and Mercs in Change as a small Kid.
I'm 50ish....
AZCoinDevil
Also within the past year I have received a silver Roosie, a Frankie, a silver Washington, 90% and 40% Kennedies and last but not least a Walker in change from stores or from my local bank. Silver still circulates today, more than 40 years after the mint stopped making 90% silver coins.
Have a Great Day!
Louis
Side note: I was young but I was not stupid.
<< <i>I can remember Silver Coins.
Heres one, we had a "Breadman" that would deliver Breads and Baked goods. He also had a Candy tray and for a nickle of a dime get a Huge Candy Bar.
I remember getting Standing walkers and Mercs in Change as a small Kid.
I'm 50ish....
AZCoinDevil
My father was a "breadman" in western Detroit. He kept his change in a cigarbox that he brought in at night, and I got to play with it. That is how I got started collecting coins, when a friend of one of my older brothers explained to me what the dates and mint marks meant.
TD
I say that walking the bourse, surfing the web and going through dealers' stock is like checking my change back as a kid. What am I saying? I still check my change!
Missed it by *that* much
--Severian the Lame
You wouldn't believe how long it took to get him to sit still for this.