Were You Carting $1,000 Bags of Morgans from the Mint?

Did anyone here experience first hand the rush in the early 1960's of trading silver certificates for $1,000 bags of silver dollars from the Mint? Please share your stories. And post your pictures. I would love to see any old photos of a $1,000 bag, the trunk of your car with $1,000 bags, or a shot from back at the shop while sorting through them...
Thanks!
Edward
Thanks!
Edward
He who knows he has enough is rich.
0
Comments
Only once did we get a bag of uncs. It was an audited bag (Treasury bag within a Fed bag). It had 999 pristine 1878 S and 1 beat up 1923 Peace. We all had 1878 S high grade already and were quite disappointed with our find. We could phone ahead and the dollars would be sitting on the counter when we got there.
bags. Few were uncirculated. Those that were UNC did not stand out in my mind, as I don't remember
any dates/mintmarks.
I was paid in silver dollars that I picked out of the count. Was able to amass quite a nice collection.
Then I went to college and met my wife.....those dollars sure spent easily! This was fall of '64 and
spring of '65 that I spent them. It worked and we are still a team!
bob
I was 11 years old in 1962. My dad was skeptical that you could find anything of value in the silver dollars being released, UNTIL one day he went to a local bank and got 10 silver dollars-One of those 10 was an 1889-CC. $1000 was big-big money in 1962.He did not have $1000 so he borrowed some money from his older sister and ordered a bag a week. They would arrive at the bank on Wednesdays and he was on late shift at work to you know who went through them after school-ME. He went through them after I got done-Just in case I missed anything-We culled out all the better dates CC's and 1893-S's. One bag had 2 1893-S's in it and an 1859-S seated liberty dollar and some 1889-CC's. This lasted for 22 weeks (My dad kept records).The 23rd bag was only 500 coins -there was nothing in this one-Someone else had gone through it and took out all the goodies. This lasted until mid-winter 1963. Then there were no more. The best part was that there were no Peace Dollars in the bags. The bags were all locked away before Peace dollars came out.
We could not afford to keep them all, so the ones we did not want he took back to the bank and used them to trade in for the next weeks bag. One of the bags was a mint bag of 1904-O Morgans with the seal still intact.-Most of these coins were sold on Ebay from 2000-2005. I still have a few 1904-O's that my dad had graded by PCGS as MS65 and MS65PL. There was no VAM book back then or much info on varieties, so who knows what we turned back in. There were many low grade of the commoner date CC's mostly ag-vg. The 1859-S was the only seated dollar we found. There was a grand total of 5 1893-S's with one of them so worn that you could only see the date and the MM -P1 for sure. This one we sold right away. The hardest date to find was the 1894. We only found one of these and it was only a low grade G. I still have a few of these dollars in my collection but not very many.
Bob
.
i did not (because i wasn't alive then) but would still like to share
sitting across from the 2008 numismatist of the year on many occasions 1 on 1 have been told many a story and of those stories is this one
after buying many vans and hiring many employees to make trips to pick up the sealed mint bag dollars
he managed to accumulate at one point $1,000,000 in silver dollar certificates from dozens and dozens of banks to trade for silver dollar coins in mint sealed bags
hearing the lengthy version about receiving mint sealed bags of key date morgans in gem unc so much so that a separate bank was built just to house the bags aside from all the other storage being used
is just simply mind-boggling to me still to this day
on the subject of hoards.
hearing this same person talk about the (redfield hoard i think) judge that stopped the auction estate sale of a multi-million dollar (millions then!) hoard from going to auction where the prices realized would most likely be
nominal and not in the best interest of the estate based on the person that I speak of and 1 other huge numismatic dealer at the time work together to purchase the hoard and split it without it going to auction and likely
increasing the income from that sale vs auction was just as mind boggling.
also hearing from an employee about a family that had accumulated 3 apple baskets full of silver dimes by the time that bullion skyrocketed in the 80s and telling of what was found in those hundreds of pounds of dimes just
left me speachless, not to mention the other numerous stories provable with invoices was nearly too much for my little mind to bare!
Don't hear as many as I used to but still come across some doozies from time to time.
would post some more stories but cannot sleep for the life of me and as such my brain is too tired but apparently not tired enough for sleep >< even with my new "perfect luxury contour pillow" too bad it wasn't filled with
something that would knock me out cold on cue, even if i slept on the floor ><. in that case they could keep the stoopid pillow lol
.
.
<< <i>Wow is all I can say, because I was born too late for that craze. In fact the only time I ever got a real silver dollar, an 1897, was in ca. 1976 when I was a kid. I was standing in line in an A&W waiting to buy a gallon jug of rootbeer when an older man ahead of me paid for his lunch with the coin. Of course I promptly bought it from the cashier - but then I didn't have enough for the rootbeer so I had to run back home and scrounge out an older dollar bill out of my collection to buy the rootbeer. The rootbeer is long gone, but I still have the dollar somewhere. >>
I've recieved five silver dollars from tellers over the past year, so they're still out there...
My finds in chronological order;
1922 Peace with 60 Ikes.
1889 Morgan and two 1921 Morgans with 2 Ikes, one of which was a MS 1972 T2.
1973-S Ike, burnished, with 75 other Ikes.
In our little town we had a big time mail-order dealer who was active with full page ads in numismatist, numismatic scrapbook, etc. all through the 50's and 60's. He was independently wealthy before he became a coin dealer, but up until the late 80's he had leased all available bank vault space in a 20+ mile radius of our town for bags. He was a hard money guy and could easily have afforded 1,000 bags or more. I was fairly young when dealing with him and he had fun popping my eyes out with the stuff he would show me, knowing I couldn't afford any of it. There are some seasoned veterans on here who might faint to see some of the stuff he could pull out. I once asked him if he had any Shield nickels...he handed me a double row 2x2 stock box, half were proof and unc shield nickels, the other row was half-dimes starting with a half-disme. I almost dropped the box.
I helped count. When counting 1 bag, I noted how the bag was full on shiny coins. The collector gave me 1. That coin is my avatar, an 82-S which I still have. Whoever thinks a white Morgan had to be dipped is wrong. I may be the only owner of that coin and it was never dipped.
I guess there were a minimum of 100 to 300 bags loaded into the vault. After loading, I remember they couldn't close the gate, and the bags were stacked 2 or 3 high. They were cursing. They had to move half out and restack higher.
Thanks for the great story!
Alas, I was too you g to partake.
I did have a grand old time about 3 years ago going through tons of half dollar boxes. I used to go through them with my parents, it created some fond memories for all of us.
Thanks again!
He who knows he has enough is rich.
My grandpa and dad still have all of my grandpa's bags he purchased from 59-64. Ill post the story later
Complete Set of Chopmarked Trade Dollars
Carson City Silver Dollars Complete 1870-1893http://www.pcgs.com/setregistry/showcase.aspx?sc=2722"
I thought it would have been a good idea to get one, but my Dad used the money for a down payment in our family's first house instead.
60 years into this hobby and I'm still working on my Lincoln set!
My father would look through the bags and pick out anything he needed to fill the holes in his Whitman blue albums. He actually assembled 3 or 4 partial collections contained with 12 or 15 albums. He would then bring the bags into his office for the other guys to look through (and pay him for whatever they took).
Decades lates, when I asked my father, "Why didn't you just keep EVERYTHING, you old fool?" he replied, "Because $100 was actually a lot of money back then, you young punk!"
And a PS...mom died in 2002 and dad followed in 2003. As I was looking through those old albums the other night, those old circulated coins actually have quite a lot of sentimental value now...as I remember their efforts to collect them.
No kidding...all collector value aside, we know it's worth at least $35,000 in melt!
I do not have stories of hundreds or thousands of silver dollars. My silver dollar experiences are much more limited.
My parents had a few circulated common date Morgans and Peace dollars that eventually were given to me. I have sold them over the past few years. I still have a circulated 1890-CC Morgan my mother gave me. The coin belonged to her sister, who had found it lying on the street in the 1950's or early 1960's. When my aunt died, my mom went to Iowa for the funeral. Other family members and my mom split up the belongings of my aunt. My mom took the Morgan, brought it home and gave it to me. My parents also opened a bank account in the 1960's and for doing so the bank gave them a Morgan dollar. It is an 1882S Morgan that is probably MS64. It has a very clean obverse and is blast white. My parents gave it to me and I still have it.
I've been told I tolerate fools poorly...that may explain things if I have a problem with you. Current ebay items - Nothing at the moment
note: I ran real fast a few days later and knocked my sisters friend down and ran her nylons stockings. She came to the door complaining to my dad and I had to give her a dollar (my silver dollar). I remember going out with my mom and spending those silver dollars on groceries and other stuff. Money was tight back then.
<< <i>A fun tidbit $1000 in 1964 is over $7200 today!!!
My grandpa and dad still have all of my grandpa's bags he purchased from 59-64. Ill post the story later >>
A picture would be great!
He who knows he has enough is rich.
<< <i>
<< <i>A fun tidbit $1000 in 1964 is over $7200 today!!!
My grandpa and dad still have all of my grandpa's bags he purchased from 59-64. Ill post the story later >>
A picture would be great! >>
Yeah, but are the bags still full of silver dollars- or did he just keep the old bags?