There was a time when there was the saying "the sun never sets on her majesties kingdom". I might have that saying wrong! but what is true, there's many coins that have the queens (or kings) portrait on it, from many countries.
Big Burt, that's a cool story about the old paino. I wish I could luck into something like that. I wonder if there were any old painos stashed away in the old buildings in Deadwood before its current gambling "renaissance" and what had fallen or had been stashed in them? If those old painos could talk...
Being from Cali and mentioning that the paino was made out of black walnut, you might appreciate this fact. All the English walnuts growing nuts in the Central Valley are grafted onto black walnut root stock. When driving around there, its sort of strange seeing the two different colored barks and many times the "stump" may be wider than than the main trunk of the tree. I guess there is a fungus or something in the soil that the English walnut is plagued by but the native black walnut not. There are a few black walnut nurseies as well that we saw drving around there in the trip I did in the mid-2000s providing the root stock.
My sister lives in S. Dakota and not far from Deadwood, what it must have been like in the days of the "gold rush" there!
So here are the results of my $500 experiment. I ended up with 23 Philly mint Bicentennials that might never have much more than face value although perhaps my kids and g-kids (if I have them) may find them fun, especially g-kids as they get older and we're heading for the TriCentennial (if the U.S. is still around).
I did find a 1993 clad S mint proof that must have come from someone's collection. Its luster (the pix isn't very good but it will cast a glow on your finger if held above it) is what caught my eye, and maybe the sound as well but the weight is the same as other clads. Currently, really nice ones of this are going for a couple of bucks on ebay.
I also kept out a very nice condition (still had an edge to the rim and good luster) a 1971 clad because I saw so many 1971. coins. This will be my remembrance of my experiment. I don't think I would do this again because I don't think there's much to find in bank rolls anymore (at least in my metro location)...
P.S. I will go back and see if I missed any S mint (this is where the "proof" sets are made it appears) and any of the common misprints (there's only a couple for Denver and Philly mint coins) of the half dollars but the chances are very low finding anything more of value.
Well, I finally went through all my 50 cent pieces again to make sure I didn't miss a "S" mint (a proof) or 1974-D "double die" on the reverse but no so such luck. The wifey didn't want to take any back (I had them all nicely bagged up in $10 lots) and I forgot the bank had a counting machine. The teller was new and didn't know what to do right off but then pointed out the counting machine (the branch I usually go do watch their counting machine with eagle eyes so I wasn't sure if I could use this one without "supervision"). Anyway, after getting reassurances that half dollars went through the machine, I took my $100 (didn't bring the whole box in at once) and ran them through.
Even though I knew it had counted all my coins, when the machine said "check coin return" I did without thinking and was surprised at all the crap in there (this was at about 4:30 in the afternoon). Pulled out a handful of "coins" and trash and threw it all in my plastic grocery sack I had brought the coins in with. So, this is what I got:
4 car wash tokens (no cash value and no company name on them)
1 Sudanese coin (50 Piastres-before South Sudan broke away [most of our Sudanese refugees here are from the South Sudan])
1 Canadian Quarter (around here almost every place takes them as a U.S. quarter
4 U.S. Nickels
1 U.S. dime
4 pennies (2 loose, 2 glunked together)
a plastic coat button
assorted trash
So it was worth at least 30-50+ cents for me checking out the coin return. Sort of fun. Maybe I'll try it again...
Last edited by DakotaRog; 02-19-2015 at 10:35 PM.
Did my first $500 last week and found a 1982-P w/o the FG mark. Sent it off to get graded. I'd look for all varieties and not only older coins. Well worth it if it comes back worth $100!
Last edited by miked; 05-03-2017 at 07:37 AM.
"Profit begins when you buy NOT when you sell." {quote passed down to me from a wise man}
Now go beat the copper out of something, Miked
Here is the place I go to check coin value of American coins.... PCGS The Standard for the Rare Coin Industry
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