Design Types of US Coins and Coin Collecting

Design Types of US Coins and Coin Collecting

Coin collecting is a fun hobby that anyone who has the time can do. A coin’s history and its development can be learned by collecting them.

At one point in time, between 1838 and1933, the United States issued gold coins for circulation. The Liberty Head bust was used as the design until 1907. The design was then changed to the Indian Head and Saint Gaudens motifs until 1933 when the “Great Depression” started. This prompted the recall of the coins which makes it very rare to find any of them today.

The most valuable coin in the world is the 1933 Double Eagle. This was a $20 gold coin that was made in the 1800’s after the California gold rush. This coin was not allowed to be used in the 1930’s and when this coin was auctioned in 2002, it sold for nearly eight million dollars.

Since gold coins are hard to find, most collectors select other coins.

One type of collection you might consider is the one made up of coins that are flawed when the coin was minted. If you can find a coin with a misspelled word, a wrong date, off-center characteristics, or double-punched marks, these coins are valuable. Such mistakes can increase a coin’s value from $50 to a $1000.

Coins that were only issued or circulated for short period of time also make good collectibles.

A coin collection is at its best if it is focused on a certain coin. A collector can choose from pennies, nickels, dimes, quarters and dollars.

Another way of collecting is disregarding the types of coins but concentrating on a certain time period. Coins have different mint marks and collecting those that were struck in the same location can also be interesting. The important thing for hobbyists is to stick to the collection until it has been completed.

For a good start subscribe to a coin publication such as Coin World or Coinage Magazine for information on the types of coins that you might want to collect. The internet or a local coin shop can also help expand the search for those coins that can’t be found in your locale or out of state.

Building a coin collection will take a long time - months or even years. The United States has produced so many coins that it is hard to keep track of them. By deciding on the coin(s) you want to collect, the challenge to complete that collection begins.



Coin Collecting News

  • Coin show continues to draw wide variety of collectors
    PERRY -- To those who think that coin collecting is a quaint hobby of yesteryear, this weekend’s Middle Georgia Coin and Currency Show at the Georgia National Fairgrounds told a different story. Between 5,000 and 7,000 attended the 50th edition of the show, some to see what was available for purchase and some to see what the value was for the coins they brought in to be evaluated.

  • What Is Legal Tender?
    The topic of legal tender is one of the most misunderstood parts of coin collecting. By definition, legal tenser is money that can be used to: “Pay debts, both private and public.” Please note “can” rather than “must.”

  • Addicted to Collecting: From Malcolm Forbes to Me
    This article appeared in Forbes on January 30, 2012. Last week Sotheby's auctioned off 13 French military paintings from the once legendary Forbes collection. It represents the end of an era.

  • My silver coins mint me money
    AS a teacher, my students often ask me questions when outside the classroom.

  • Shepherdsville Police release video of flea market robbery in hopes to identify suspects
    (WHAS11) -- Shepherdsville police are hope that surveillance video will lead them to the men responsible for stealing nearly $95,000 in rare coins and cash. The surveillance video shows the two men walking around inside The Most Awesome Flea Market early in the morning last Sunday. Police say the men disabled an alarm, then targeted vendors selling coins. “The only ones that were targeted were ...

  • Bush Defends Auto Bailout Amid Romney Attacks
    Bush, Romney, and Obama all show some love to the bank bailouts, though -- who says we can't all get along

  • Go gold, collector says
    Local Keith Knight believes the day could come when our paper money is worthless. For that reason and more, Knight is a huge proponent of buying gold. Knight has collected gold coins for 40 years and now owns hundreds, which he keeps in a bank vault....

  • In the alleys, a bottle-fed economy blooms
    It's a familiar sound: the jangle of a shopping cart filled with empties being pushed down a bumpy back alley. In many parts of the city, bottle pickers are so commonplace that people aren’t surprised if what they leave outside their blue bins is gone within minutes.

  • Rare penny sells for $1 million at coin show
    ORLANDO, Fla. -- Talk about a lucky penny. It was actually worth $1 million. That was the final bid by an unknown buyer for the one-cent copper coin minted in 1793, the first year the United States produced its own coins. Its sale was one of the biggest deals at the coin show and annual convention of the Florida United Numismatics at the Orange County Convention Center. read more

  • Richard (RJ) Eskow: People Power vs Banker Power: Score One For The People
    I hate to sound Pollyanna-ish, but sometimes the sunny point of view turns out to be right. Yes, corporate money has hijacked democracy. And it's...