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Coins Before TPG's...Let's Have Some Historical Perspective!

Ok, in the 1970's I was filling Whitman folder's with Lincoln's, Merc's and Buffalo Nickel's. I would go to the local coin shop with my Pop to get some of the hard to find "S" mint's in well circulated condition. Heck, I didn't care. I was a kid and all that mattered was filling the hole. As an aside, the coin shop guy was this older man who constantly smoked cigars and hung the most recent playboy centerfold in the john.


I never remembered encapsualted anything visiting the coin shops in the mid to late seventies. That is probably logical as I don't believe that encapsulation was available at that point (maybe ANACS).

Anywho, I wonder what the experinces of the more advanced and mature ( 20's, 30's or above) collector's were like in the 1970's? No internet either so if you were a specialist I guess that you really had to travel around to find what you were looking for.

So, if any forum members from that era are so inclined, tell this young fella (relatively speaking) what it was like before TPG's.

image
imageimage
Collector of Early 20th Century U.S. Coinage.
ANA Member R-3147111

Comments

  • BECOKABECOKA Posts: 16,961 ✭✭✭
    I was a kid in the 70's and rode my bike to the coin shop in Oregon City. I would hunt for anything I could afford with my $5 allowance. image Mainly I would get proof sets every now and then.
  • I started collecting as a kid in the late 50's and early 60's and your memories mirror many of my own. I still remember vividly the B&M I frequented and was in awe because they had a display case where you pushed a button and trays of coins rotated into view-all full of coins in 2X2's. Back then I rarely worried as much about quality as I did getting my folders complete. 5 years ago I decided to let go of my childhood memories and sold off all those coins as I really didn't have anything of great value or anything I felt great pride about-just a lot of coins. Over the past 5 years, I have replaced all my collections with quality coins graded by TPG's. I know many prefer raw coins-I'm just not one of them. I prefer the protection, the accurate grade and the ability to share the coins with my kids and grandkids with out having to worry about fingerprints and coins being dropped. I used Dansco albums for many years and just wasn't satisfied with the protection and found after a few years of use/viewing that many of the albums started to fall apart. While I look back at those early years with a smile, I much more enjoy the hobby now.
    Crazy old man from Missouri
  • RWBRWB Posts: 8,082
    Back in the pre-internet, pre-independent authentication and grading days, most of us collectors sat around the back of our caves staring at disks of metal and wondering about them. Everybody had a theory except some who lived in the Roswell Caves – they knew the disks came from the sky in a thing called the "MS 70."

    During the year, at the appointed settings of the coin star, Betelgeuse, collectors gathered to compare disks and share strips of fresh-killed mastodon. Some of us also bought and sold the disks – we exchanged them for mastodon parts, wooden clubs, shiny stones, spear points and sometimes females.

    Occasionally, one collector would be found to have altered his disks so they were more appealing. One method was to store them in emu dung for two or three moons. Others scratched mystical symbols on them and said they were things called “patterns.” All of this was in hopes of trading for greater amounts of spear points, etc. When discovered, these unsavory characters (we called them “disk docs”) were usually set out as Smilodon fatalis bait.

    One afternoon, a Great One of the Western Ice Caves decided to offer wisdom and security. For a small fee the Great One put your disks between sheets of clear ice, thereby protecting them from the unsavory ones.

    Communication was by symbols inscribed on thin bark with soot dissolved in animal fat. For long-term storage of ideas, cave walls were perfect. Everyone who wrote on their walls and followed the wisdom of the Great Sachem was required to wear a long beard, short pants and funny shoes with the toes sticking out.

    There were many other customs and traditions of those pre-civilization days, but nearly all who know them are dead of have gone Neanderthal.

    (Edited for no particular reason...)
  • Roger -

    Such insightful and meaningful recollections of the days of yore!

    image
    PM me if you are looking for U.S. auction catalogs
  • roadrunnerroadrunner Posts: 28,313 ✭✭✭✭✭
    While learning the ropes in the early 1970's I can honestly say that every local B&M took advantage of me and sold crap. I had about 10 shops within 30 miles of me. Cleaned and damaged coins were the norm...yet you were still paying good money for them. It took me a couple of years to wake up from this mess and move on. By 1975 I had a clearer understanding of what was good and what wasn't. One of my local favs even went so far as to deny they ever sold me certain coins as they didn't want them back. As a rule these guys never wanted their old coins back as they couldn't afford to pay you a fair % of what they buried you into them at.

    I'd say that 1975 to 1985 was even worse for accuracy in grading and if you didn't lose money you probably had a mentor on your side (as opposed to your local coin shop).

    roadrunner
    Barbarous Relic No More, LSCC -GoldSeek--shadow stats--SafeHaven--321gold
  • MrEurekaMrEureka Posts: 24,419 ✭✭✭✭✭
    I'll have what RWB's having!
    Andy Lustig

    Doggedly collecting coins of the Central American Republic.

    Visit the Society of US Pattern Collectors at USPatterns.com.


  • << <i>While learning the ropes in the early 1970's I can honestly say that every local B&M took advantage of me and sold crap. I had about 10 shops within 30 miles of me. Cleaned and damaged coins were the norm...yet you were still paying good money for them. It took me a couple of years to wake up from this mess and move on. By 1975 I had a clearer understanding of what was good and what wasn't. One of my local favs even went so far as to deny they ever sold me certain coins as they didn't want them back. As a rule these guys never wanted their old coins back as they couldn't afford to pay you a fair % of what they buried you into them at.

    I'd say that 1975 to 1985 was even worse for accuracy in grading and if you didn't lose money you probably had a mentor on your side (as opposed to your local coin shop).

    roadrunner >>



    Same experience for me.

    Most anything purchased from the local coin shop was overgraded by one notch (if I was lucky), or cleaned, whizzed, and utter crap (if I wasn't). Many coins offered as unc. at shows were sliders, etc.

    In short, it was a jungle out there.
  • thisnamztakenthisnamztaken Posts: 4,101 ✭✭✭✭✭
    I started collecting coins as a kid by searching through people's jars of "pennies" for Lincoln cents to fill my blue Whitman boards. I would also sometimes look through my parents' cash register at the end of the day. Although there was occasionally a low-grade Standing Liberty Quarter, Walking Liberty Half, and/or some VF-XF Franklin Halves in there, I usually wasn't allowed to keep them for myself unless I "bought" them with money I had saved up from my 25¢-50¢ weekly allowance that I earned for doing daily chores at our small Mom & Pop restaurant. My Great Aunt also would give us kids a 90% silver quarter, half, silver dollar, or red seal $2.00 bill for our piggy banks the 3-4 times a year that she came to visit us.

    During that stage of my collecting I had no idea that some people actually paid more than face value for coins to add to their collections. I discovered that phenomenon after I left home and visited B & M coin shops in Madison, Wi. while working and going to school there. I remember feeling like I was really living life in the fast lane by paying a dollar or two over face for BU coins for my Franklin Half collection. At the same time I also went through many bank rolls of coins and found a few scarce Lincolns, Buffalo and Jefferson nickels, Mercs., etc.

    Then I moved to Ca. and stopped collecting coins until the mid to late 70's, at which time I resumed adding to my collection through mail-order bidding and buying, attending most of the Long Beach Convention Center shows, Queen Mary shows, hotel shows, etc., and most of all through weekly "bid-boards" at a couple of B & M coin shops that always had huge crowds on closing nights at that time. Those bid boards drew in a lot of customers for the store owners and provided a great opportunity for fellow numismatists to rub shoulders, exchange coin knowledge and just have fun. I guess you could say that internet coin forums like this are today's virtual "bid boards". I don't remember ever seeing a slabbed coin at that time, and most collectors were always complaining about how the MS grading numbers were being manipulated by dealers to squeeze every last dollar out of a sale. At least some things haven't changed all that much since then. image

    I witnessed and participated in the big silver price run-up of the late 1970's-early 1980's, caused primarily by the Hunt brothers attempt to corner the silver market. There were literally lines of people at shops that bought junk silver until the market suddenly crashed in 1981 (or was it 1982?). I got burned along with many others when silver suddenly plummeted, having bought high, and soon afterwards left coin collecting behind in disgust for about 20 years. Several years ago I started being involved again, so here I am. image

    I'm sure that was more information than you wanted to know but...you did ask. image
    I never thought that growing old would happen so fast.
    - Jim
  • BearBear Posts: 18,953 ✭✭✭
    Top Tier TPG have done more then stabilize

    the grading for the coin industry. They have also

    allowed collectors to understand grading by

    being able to compare graded coins to raw.


    Now, before I get outraged comments. I realize

    that graded coins can have a measure of variance, as well

    as examples of errors. However, the Best of the TPGs,

    have established a level of consistency that would have

    never existed with raw coins.
    There once was a place called
    Camelotimage
  • GrivGriv Posts: 2,804


    << <i>I was a kid in the 70's and rode my bike to the coin shop in Oregon City. I would hunt for anything I could afford with my $5 allowance. image Mainly I would get proof sets every now and then. >>



    Me too but it was the 60's and my allowance was 50 cents.
  • SwampboySwampboy Posts: 13,112 ✭✭✭✭✭
    RWB image

    "Inspiration exists, but it has to find you working" Pablo Picasso

  • mrearlygoldmrearlygold Posts: 17,858 ✭✭✭


    << <i>I'll have what RWB's having! >>



    Me too!
  • Rememberances of the mid to late 1940s time period.


    Indian cents, Liberty Head nickels, and Barber coins were still easily found in circulation. Most casual collectors stored their finds and acquisitions in Whitman holders. Large cents were commomly available for twenty five cents each.

    Just about every large department store sold coins and stamps. Brick and mortar stores usually sold both coins and stamps. Mom and Pop stores typically also sold comic books and other collectibles.

    It was not unusual to find dealers who bought and sold foreign coins by the pound. Many were acquired from GIs returning from World War 2.

    US dimes, quarters, half dollars and dollars contained silver.

    Most banks had silver dollar rolls available at face for their customers.

    Gold coin ownership of over $100 was illegal but a few ignored the law.

    There was not very much coin speculation.

    Most people considered themselves to be coin collectors, not numismatists.

    Assembling a complete collection of Lincoln cents was a rather common goal and often a family pursuit. The majority of collections were formed from coins found in circulation or via trade. Many collectors never purchased even one coin. The value of most collections was small and the enjoyment and excitement was in finding a coin to fill a hole in the Whitman folder. Finding a 1909-SVDB or a 1914-D Lincoln was a major high for a lucky few.

    Grading was inconsistant and a few dealers did not bother with grades. They simply listed prices.

    Many, many non-copper coins were cleaned. Shiny was good!

    Hoards of coins were discovered several times a year.

    Descriptions of coins were short and simple.

    Auction catalogs and price lists lacked pictures.

    Purchases made by mail were sent on approval.

    I do not recall there being buyer's fees in the relatively few auctions during this period.

    Coin clubs were popular and a great place to buy/sell/trade.

    Coin and stamp collecting were very popular with many young people.

    The war was over and life was very good for most people. There was a general feeling of euphoria, innocence, trust, and optimism in the country which carried over into coin collecting. All this began to change with the start of the Korean War in 1950. Unfortunately those feelings have never returned to the country to the same degree. It was a great time to be a coin collector.





  • PerryHallPerryHall Posts: 46,867 ✭✭✭✭✭
    I remember the bad old days before TPGs. If you didn't know what you were doing you got screwed on a regular basis. Dealers would buy at one grade (lower) and sell at a different grade (higher). If you bought a BU coin, you usually got a Buffed Up slidder. If you bought a key date coin you had to be careful because there were many, many, altered coins. I collected US gold. You wouldn't believe all the counterfeit gold coins that were out there. Many coins in the market place were cleaned, tooled, or otherwise messed with. Be thankfull for the TPG companies.

    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

  • jhdflajhdfla Posts: 3,030 ✭✭✭
    Started collecting coins around 1964, when I was 10... my grandfather worked for a formal wear outfit in Pennsauken, NJ, called Rochester Formal Wear, he was a tailor. The proprietor of this outfit was a gentleman by the name of Pep Levin, who was accumulating silver certificates and redeeming them for silver dollars at the banks for a few years prior to this time, and when the switch came to clad coinage in 1965 he and my grandfather began hoarding silver from circulation, so I had the opportunity of going thru my grandfathers accumulation and filling Whitman albums. My grandfather died of a massive coronary in '66, but I continued filling my albums mostly from coins I received from my paper route, there were afew customers who gave me mercury dimes and older coins, when they found out I was a coin collector. Pep Levin continued with his silver dealing, food stamp operations, and hand his hand in a few other cookie jars, remembered as one of Camden's most memorable people:

    Pep Levin

    Anyways, I was introduced to Gem material in the 70's by the late Gene Edwards and Bill Nagle, and have continued off and on only buying gem/near gem material since that time. Back in the pre-slab days, unless you were hooked up with someone reputable, it was really easy to get burned by sliders passed as gem... the TPG system has corrected that to some degree, although many of us will argue there are a fair number of MS 62 coins in holders represented as uncs which are in reality AU coins. Much has been done to address the AT issue as well, however, like it or not at one time or another many of the coins even in holders have been messed with at one point or another by someone... very few people like to hear this, but considering the length of time many coins have been around, it is almost inevitable that at some point in their life they have been wiped, dipped, or "enhanced" in some fashion. The percentage of coins especially the early issues and 19th century material that are totally original and never messed with in any fashion are really quite small, including those residing in slabs... when you look at a brilliant early seated or bust coin, there is no way in the world a hunk of silver could have retained it's mint brilliance for that many years, but they are slabbed, as are the ones which have been re-toned... all under the idea of "market acceptability"

    Edited to add, the TPG system has enabled many dealers to survive and prosper, some of them very well known, at least with regard to gem material, who cannot grade raw coins well. Many of them would not survive without the TPG's. The percentage of dealers with the kind of eye and experience to accurately grade is much smaller than most people think, IMHO...
  • mommam17mommam17 Posts: 971 ✭✭✭
    My local B&M dealer was a real good guy. Never ripped anyone. Very knowledgeable about commems and taught me alot. Later wrote a book about commems which was needed at the time. If he didn`t have a coin I wanted, he`d give an honest opinion of any coin I brought in for him to look at. Coin World dealers would be my source, some good coins and some were returned.
  • TorinoCobra71TorinoCobra71 Posts: 8,061 ✭✭✭
    I did the samething with the Blue whitman folders in the 70s. I have them all: 1c, 5c, 10c, 25,etc...... Now I am spoiled and only use the Dansco albums. I still got all my blue whitmans, and will keep them as long as possible!

    TC71

    image
  • I started collecting in the mid-late'50's (11-12 years old) by going through the Sunday collection at Mt. Carmel Church in Pittsfield, MA. Good old Fr. Santini would allow us to replace coins we took out at face value. The "worth" of a coin was of no particular significance to a tweleve year old. The only thing that mattered was filing an empty hole ina Whitman folder. Pieces with less wear than other pieces were easily discernible so were the ones most often picked.

    My Dad gave me a handful of change one day and it included two 55/55. I sold them off rather quickly for $25 each (I think it was $25). If only I was visionary! But $50 or so to a teenager in the mid-fifties bought a lot of Nehi sodas and baseball bats (my true passion at that time).

    Years passed and I "grew up" and heaed off to college in Connecticut. I no longer needed the "toys" of my childhood (just like little Jackie Horner in Puff the Magic Dragon) and sold off my Whitman's and my complete baseball card collection. There's that visionary thing again.

    I got serious again after college and frequented a great B&M shop in Fairfield, CT (Brooklawn Coins). I was into WLHs and Nick would always save me the nicest pieces he came across. I bought many nice Walkers that I believe would grade 66 and better for $25 - $50 each.

    Nick's pricing was pretty simple. He sold at 100% of Trends and bought at 70% of Trends. You always knew the score He always made a market for anything you wanted to sell. I never felt taken advantage of by Nick. He was certainly the exception rather than the rule. Friday nights at the coin shop, cookies, bid boards! Just great. Unfortuneately, Nick's wife was murdered by two thugs who tried to rob them as they walked into their house after one of our Friday night coin shop gatherings. Nothing was ever the same with Nick after that.

    I drifted in and out of coins for the next 25-30 years (marriage, kids, college, etc), with no particular direction or purpose, and then selling off, always for a loss. It's only the last 10 years or so that I've found definition in my collecting habits. I'm a happy collector today.

    I've seen through my 50 years of on-again, off-again collecting that, with the exception of Nick, the raw coins I purchased were always under-graded at the time of purchase and over-graded at the time of sale. I think I'm 100% in the past six decades!

    It's not that I lack grading skills. It was because the secondary market was essentially an oligopoly with little room for the collector's voice. So, I applaud TPGs for providing a common (but often debatable) base line and the internet for allowing the collector the opportunity to make deals at "employee pricing". Neither is perfect but it's better than the snake oil that the collector had to deal with before the advent of TPGs, internet, forums. The only thing that could make collecting better is to bring back Fr. Santini and Nick.
  • fcloudfcloud Posts: 12,133 ✭✭✭✭
    The dealers in my area would sell you overgraded coins, when it was time to sell them back they would of course undergrade. They also wanted to sell you everything they could, but only wanted to buy the keys when it came time for you to sell. I am so glad I was able to learn that lesson young. I also leard to sell at coin shows. When I sold off my entire collection (almost - I kept the coins my wife had giving me over the years as gifts and still own them today) I took my 1916-D Merc to a show where about five or so dealers offered to buy at AG pricing, but one dealer offered VG pricing (based on the coins real grade). It would be much harder today for a dealer to convince you a VG coin is AG and take it from you at very, very low sales price.

    (Being vague on purpose as some these dealer are still in business.)

    President, Racine Numismatic Society 2013-2014; Variety Resource Dimes; See 6/8/12 CDN for my article on Winged Liberty Dimes; Ebay

  • FairlanemanFairlaneman Posts: 10,426 ✭✭✭✭✭


    << <i>I was a kid in the 70's and rode my bike to the coin shop in Oregon City. I would hunt for anything I could afford with my $5 allowance. image Mainly I would get proof sets every now and then. >>



    Oddly enough I beleive the above coin shop, if it is the one below the elevator, was the first shop I ever went to for coins. This all started in 1981 so compared to most here I am a pup. At the time I was very conservative, with money, and have stayed so through the years.

    Anyway mom gave me her accumalation of silver coins that she had stashed away. Whitman folders of mercury dimes, lincoln cents, morgan dollars and some type coins were within the hoard. Also she purchased proof sets from the mint and they started with 1954. After looking at all of the stuff the mercury dimes caught my eye and the ride began.

    At the time the Portland area had a half dozen coin outlets and the Vancouver area had two I believe.

    Usually every week or two the rounds were made to check for new upgrade material for the mercury set. Mistakes were made, purchases of overgraded material and problem coins. All in all everything worked out just fine for about five years and then the gross overgrading of coins began in the area. The reputable dealers were still quite fair but they did not always have what was needed.

    At this point trips to Seattle started to be made and the novel idea of coins shows was found. This is when the obvious overgrading of the period really showed up. These folks were the rip-meisters of the world and after a couple of years total disgust with the hobby set in.

    In 1988 the decision was made to junk the whole collecting idea. At this time the mercury set was missing two coins and it was, IMO, a high AU set with many MS coins in it. The 21P was easily a MS64 coin by todays standards. The set was taken to a local show, Willamette Coin Club, and the first dealer the set was shown to was very interested in the set. The offer he gave me was something like $1500.00. Total disgust hit like a ton of bricks and I walked out of the show. During the next few months the set was parted out and sold piece by piece to the local dealers in the Portland and Seattle area. When this was finished the hobby was put behind untill 1998 or 1999 when just on a whim I decided to see what was happening at the Salem coin show on a snowy thanksgiving weekend.

    Slabs were discouvered at Salem and the thrill came back. At this show some of the old dealers were still in business. The good dealers still graded fairly and the shady dealers had not changed either. Still at this time some of the dealers that could not grade worth a darn had the very optimistic grades posted on their coins even though TPG slabs were in the case also. You would think their grading would get a little better. Thats being way tooooo optimistic I guess.

    The 80's was a great time to learn in the hobby. You took your lumps every once in a while but I think it was a better period to learn how to grade and to learn about what should be avoided.

    Ken
  • thisnamztakenthisnamztaken Posts: 4,101 ✭✭✭✭✭
    Lots of interesting stories guys, plus it's comforting to learn that I'm not the only old fogey here. image
    I never thought that growing old would happen so fast.
    - Jim
  • There were no TPGs when I started collecting. Most of my very modest collection has come from circulation finds.

    Planchet
  • carlcarl Posts: 2,054
    Ah yes, the good old days. Way back in the 40's and 50's like so many already noted there was no internet, only one new thing that just came out called the Red Book. No TV yet and when we did get one there was a limit as to what you could watch. We had a coin store only a few blocks from where I lived. Used to go there almost every day or at least looked in the window every day. All coins were as they were and not in slabs. Not even locked up at night since theft of coins and stamps were the least thought of crimes around. No albums to put coins in only Whitman folders. Never even saw a slabbed coin. Coin prices were what ever any one wanted to charge since no way to compare except find another coin store and ask but not that many around the neighborhood.
    All coins in circulation were Standing Liverty Quarters, Walking Halves, Mercury Dimes, etc. There were always Indian Head Cents in your change and no one thought anything of it. I remember all the Sitting Liberty coins still in circulation and again, no one thought much of that either. I started collecting pennies because that was all I could afford. There was no such thing as an allowance. If you wanted money you had to find a way to earn it. I remember going through all the alleys collecting bottles for the deposit. Back then most, not all, glass bottles could be turned into a store for the deposit. I used to wonder why so many people were to lazy to take them back for the deposit but glad they didn't since that was one of my biggest incomes. Much later I found out they put them out purposely for us kids so we could have some money.
    My biggest and most rememberance of a great coin deal was that coin shop by my house. In the window one day there was this dish with 10 - 1916D Mercury Dimes and I wanted at least one. The guy in the store knew me well and made me a deal. All for $1.50 each if I bought all 10. I did and that was all the money I had been saving for a long, long time. Still have all those.
    However, my main memory was when my Dad started coming home with those brand new, just minted Silvery looking cents in 1943. He constantly came home with those for me. I ended up with over 30 rolls of them and still have them.
    Carl
  • rickoricko Posts: 98,724 ✭✭✭✭✭
    There were no coin shops where I grew up (Catskill Mountains, NYS)... all the coins I collected (50's) were from my paper route or relatives. I had no experience with B&M shops until the 90's - (spent a fair time living in Europe and the Carribean). All of my earlier coins disappeared during my Mother's 'housecleaning' after I joined the Navy.... IHC's, 55 DDO, a few Morgans, Mercs etc. I did inherit a few from my Dad... but nothing of numismatic significance. Now, I mostly acquire at coin shows, through friends and the occasional auction. Cheers, RickO
  • Wait just one second.....you mean to tell me that there were coins BEFORE there were TPGs? NO WAY!
  • JulianJulian Posts: 3,370 ✭✭✭
    I have been involved in numismatics professionally for over 40 years.

    Dealers were responsible for what they sold to the retail public, especially if they wished to build up a clientele.

    They needed to be knowledgeable and have the integrity to stand behind their merchandise.

    Today, many dealers abandon that responsibility in favor of the TPG's guarantee. Auction houses do not need to stand behind anything that is being auctioned, as long as it is encapsulated.

    Many of us that deal in unencapsulated coins do stand behind their merchandise. The only negative is when the client becomes dis-satisfied when an unencapsulated coin does not meet the standards, on that day, of the TPG's. Sophisticated numismatists that understand that encapsulated coins only represent the TPG's opinion on that day mostly will retain rare and difficult coins, if they meet their own standards.

    That is distinctly different from dealing and auctioning prior to the TPG's.

    The necessity remains for a collector to appreciate the coins that they acquire for their collections, to research, and to be able to evaluate truly scarce coins.

    The TPG's are indeed valuable, but they are not perfect.
    PNG member, numismatic dealer since 1965. Operates a retail store, also has exhibited at over 1000 shows.
    I firmly believe in numismatics as the world's greatest hobby, but recognize that this is a luxury and without collectors, we can all spend/melt our collections/inventories.

    eBaystore
  • If one truly wants to get a historical perspective, it can easily be done by reading the numismatic publications from the past.

    Among the more interesting and educational volumes would be The Numismatist, older auction catalogues and fixed price lists, and various reference books that include some "personality" with the coins that are researchered.

    Dave Bowers has written numerous modern books which focus on the people, events, and activities of the past.

    There are lots of "tidbits" to be found if one assembles a large numismatic related library. Just reading the excellent literature catalogue descriptions of lit dealers like George Kolbe and Charles Davis will provide many unknown and pertinent insights as to what the earlier numismatist's were doing and how they did things.
    PM me if you are looking for U.S. auction catalogs
  • When I was a kid, I watched my dad open letters from various coin dealers, and look over coins he had ordered. In the early 70's, he filled his whitman albums with choice bu and gem bu grade coins, as an investment and for the fun of collecting. Indian head, Lincoln, buffalo, and walking libs. After he passed away, these coins were sent in for grading. A big waste of money on my part. I should have educated myself better on what to look for instead of throwing away $30 a pop, sometimes $50 a pop for bodybagged coins. What interests me is where did these coin dealers get the key coins with added or removed mint marks? Was there a company called "ess corporation" where a coin dealer could send in coins and have them returned with a magical S mintmark on them? Did the dealers themselves do it or did they hire jewelers or what? Unfortunately my dad was attracted to shiney coins and didn't have the book "coin grading and counterfeit detection" by PCGS. I would have to say that coin collecting is far better now than it was 39 years ago.
  • cladkingcladking Posts: 28,742 ✭✭✭✭✭
    It sure was tough to collect high grades in those days.

    The common advice was to buy the best you could afford but it was mostly just
    the common date and scarcer Morgans being pursued. There was also a lot of
    interest in walkers and in a few other 19th and 20th century series. These were
    beginning to run up in price in high grades. Looking back now they were extremely
    cheap but gems were bringing three or four times the money of choice coins.

    There was very little competition in newer series like the Franklins and Washingtons
    but with so little interest you had to look through rolls which could get very expensive.

    The services did a great job of providing the market with a product in great demand;
    high grade coins. It became much easier to find the coins which also tended to expand
    the markets. While it didn't benefit any moderns initially because there was still no de-
    mand, it did in the longer run.

    In some ways grading was less of a problem before the TPG's. Sure there was a minefield
    for novices and collectors who weren't good at grading or authentication but there was
    never really any need to argue grade. If the coin was priced fairly it would sell and if not,
    it would sit until a novice didn't recognize how optimistically graded it was. Grade is more
    fixed now when the coin is slabbed. Owners tend to think they're PQ and lookers tend to
    think they squeeked through.

    There is a lot more safety in slabs but you still have to be careful and critical. You still need
    to know what you're buying and have an idea of the value.

    Some parts of the markets haven't really changed overmuch since the '70's. There are still
    lots of things that are rarely slabbed and buyers don't expect them to be.
    tempus fugit extra philosophiam.
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  • tychojoetychojoe Posts: 1,336 ✭✭✭
    Rememberances of the mid to late 1940s time period.

    Wow, you paint a great picture with short brushstrokes, OnlyBuffalos!

    Makes me wish for days like that.


    In the window one day there was this dish with 10 - 1916D Mercury Dimes and I wanted at least one. The guy in the store knew me well and made me a deal. All for $1.50 each if I bought all 10. I did and that was all the money I had been saving for a long, long time. Still have all those.

    Phenomenal, carl.


    However, my main memory was when my Dad started coming home with those brand new, just minted Silvery looking cents in 1943. He constantly came home with those for me. I ended up with over 30 rolls of them and still have them.

    Some guys get all the luck!

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