When collecting started, What you collected, and Why

I started in 1960 as an 11 year old. Uncirculated coins of all types. My goal was to fill all my whitman coin folders with uncirculated coins to complete a set of all US Mint issued coins produced since my birth year of 1949. Very proud to say I have complete uncirculated and proof sets and since 1999, I update each year thru mint subscriptions. Now working on my PCGS Registry sets.
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She would let me sort through her "tip" money for pennies to fill the holes. Man that was fun when I found a new one. I still have that folder.......
Bob
Lordmarcovan, WTCG, YogiBerraFan, Phoenin21, LindeDad, Coll3ctor, blue594, robkoll, Mike Dixon, BloodMan, Flakthat and others.
Box of 20
My father offerred to let we boys go through his change and have for free any
coins we needed for our collections. My brothers were getting first crack at the
cents so rather than take picked over coins I went with the nickels. It just made
sense to get 5c free rather than a penny anyway. Also I liked old coins and in
those days the buffalos certainly looked old. Most before 1927 lacked dates. I
got pretty good at telling the dates apart though since I was able to watch them
wear off over a period of years.
It's ironic that I didn't really even like uncirculated coins and didn't attach much
importance to condition. I'd always look for buffs with nice solid dates but didn't
realize that one should look for higher grades for the first year or so.
It was the mid-'60's before I was exposed much to more serious collectors. This
was when I started learning a lot more about coins and found a few copies of the
coin magazines. Fortunately I wasn't taken in by the roll and bag boom and even
managed to make a few dollars off of it. When the price crashed the only thing I
had was a few gemmy '58 dimes which had been mislaid (and still are).
After the buffalos I collected just about all the US non-gold series one or two at
a time. In the mid-'70's I got into world coins to pick silver from junk bins but soon
found that there were sometimes pretty rare base metal coins in them, too. Once
I had the Krause pretty much memorized I got into tokens and medals as well just
to have more stuff to learn and more opportunities to cherry pick and collect more.
About ten years ago I started focusing on the moderns since I felt time was running
out to accumulate them. It appears I jumped the gun a little.
The first coin I ever purchaced, was at a little show that is still in the same location, an 1865 3 Cent Piece......I was 5 or 6 years old.
I can still remember my grandfather's puzzled look when he ask, "What made you decide on a 3 cent?"
I told him, "I don't know, its just different than the Wheat Cents."
He knew I coveted that little tin. When I was a teen he gave it to me. I held onto it through a few rough years.
Now the tin is diplayed in my kitchen, Mr. Merc is in a 2x2 and I am collecting everything! I am trying to have focus, but I am so new to making conscience coin buying decisions, that I want them all!
My Dad would bring home the 'money box' full of change every Friday night and we'd pick through it. You could find coins (Canadian) going back to the early 1900's (dimes and quarters).
Our first 'album' was a paper notebook which we would scotch tape the coins into.
"“Those who sacrifice liberty for security/safety deserve neither.“(Benjamin Franklin)
"I only golf on days that end in 'Y'" (DE59)
These sets were very doable from pocket change (except the very early Jeffersons) so they suited my 10-year-old allowance quite well. I remember drooling over an uncirculated Franklin Half I saw.
US and British coin collector, and creator of The Ultimate Chuck E. Cheese's and Showbiz Pizza Place Token & Ticket Guide
I also got a proof set for my birthday or Christmas starting in 1961. That is what ulitimately hooked me on collecting.
“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!
JH
Proof Buffalo Registry Set
Capped Bust Quarters Registry Set
Proof Walking Liberty Halves Registry Set
My dad tried many times over the years to get me to collect, but I was busy chasing girls and parting. 40 years this hobby has been good to him. I hope I get half as much from coins as he has gotten.
I havent looked back since. Its funny how becoming 100% disabled at a young age can have positive impacts on ones life. If this injury never happened I wonder if I would be here today collecting history???
I hope Im still here in 40 years...
<< <i>Anyway, I had a birthday shortly after my injury and my dad got me QDB's " Experts Guide to Collecting & Investing In Rare Coins." >>
Great book. I was paging through it just Sunday evening during the Oscars.
1987, coins in circulation, grandpa.
Yea it is. It created a monster in me for coins! If theres any one book I recommend its that one. I t covers so much and really is about just the heart of collecting coins. Sorry, that book means alot to me. I never thought one book could change my life and one did.
<< <i><<Great book. I was paging through it just Sunday evening during the Oscars. >>
Yea it is. It created a monster in me for coins! If theres any one book I recommend its that one. I t covers so much and really is about just the heart of collecting coins. Sorry, that book means alot to me. I never thought one book could change my life and one did. >>
My first book and the only book that I owned for many years was the "Handbook of United States Coins - With Premium List" or "bluebook". The grades for most coins listed were: Good, V. Good, Fine & V. Fine. I wore the heck out of the that book.
60 years into this hobby and I'm still working on my Lincoln set!