Have coins? Will collect!

Have coins? Will collect!

Old coins that is. Try looking under that old dresser, or up the attic where grandma or grandpa’s things may be stashed away patiently waiting for you to discover them. Who knows, you might find a coin there, an old coin that – at today’s rate - may be worth a few dollars; probably three or four or five, even ten times what the coin was worth back then.

A penny a day, is worth okay

Fortunately or unfortunately, there was a shortage of copper during the year 1943 and all pennies made at that time were minted using steel. There were however, some Lincoln pennies that were incorrectly minted on bronze that turned out to be blanks. A few years – or decades later -these bronze pennies became a rarity and are valuable. The steel ones though, because of their commonality, are worth only between one to three dollars each.

Be aware and be wary as there are schemes where gullible coin collectors are sold coins that are copper plated in an attempt to make these pennies appear to be bronze. Also, keep your guard up anytime someone offers you a circa 1943 penny made out of a metallic white alloy.

Old coins are good coins

Coins, specifically the silver dollars made and circulated between the years 1878 and 1935, are worth between twelve dollars and twenty five dollars for the circulated coins. The coins that were not in circulation are worth considerably more.

Meantime, those quarters, dimes, or half dollar coins made and circulated prior to 1965, are usually made out of ninety percent silver and therefore worth as much as today’s silver (with an additional premium, albeit small, put on the coin’s face value).

Wrong pennies are right

There is a Lincoln penny issued in 1972 on which the date and the letters on it appear to have been doubled. This rare coin is currently worth about sixty dollars, assuming the pennies are in standard condition. The Philadelphia Mint during that time period accidentally misaligned the die used in minting the coins causing the portrait of Lincoln to look like it was doubled. Fortunately or unfortunately, eighty thousand of these were circulated before the error was discovered.

In summary, coin collecting is similar to collecting bits of history and trivia from the past. In addition to the face value its worth as a treasure - pennies, dimes and coins – often are worth more in the long run.



Coin Collecting News

  • In & Around Roxbury Township
    FRIDAY, July 30 The Sixth annual Talent Show of Hope, entitled A Beautiful Nite of Sharing will take place at 7:05 p.m. at the Eisenhower Middle School, Succasunna. Doors Open at 6:30 p.m. The event benefits charities from Roxbury to Africa. Please bring non-perishables for Roxbury Social Services Pantry. The minimum donation is $7 for adults and $5 for children 3 and up and for seniors ...

  • 6 things you shouldn't sell at a garage sale
    Your garage is probably the most convenient place to stage a sale, but it may not be the most profitable.

  • Collectors converge on Bossier Civic Center
    Indistinguishable murmurs filled the Bossier Civic Center as hundreds navigated the slipshod isles looking for seemingly lost treasures as part of the Ark-La-Tex Coin, Stamp and Card Exposition.

  • POLITICAL ECONOMY
    A congressional subcommittee has been asked to investigate the growing backlog in and foreign procurement of U.S. bullion and collectors' precious metals coin blanks manufactured by the U.S. Mint.

  • A guide to training camps around the league
    A guide to training camp, as NFL teams look toward the beginning of the 2010 season.

  • An NFL Preseason Q&A to get fans in the right frame of mind for training camps to open
    Question: The clock continues to tick on the NFL's collective bargaining agreement, which expires next March. What are the chances of the players and owners striking a new deal in the next few months?

  • Secret Agent: The feds bought Wayne McLeod's lies. He stole their futures.
    When Kenneth Wayne McLeod held a gun to his head and ended his life, it left a single bullet hole in the driver's side window of his Hummer. The dark tint of the black sport utility vehicle's window held the shattered glass together. The film was like the lies the 48-year-old Jacksonville financial adviser hid behind for years, a slick facade that kept investors in his fraudulent bond fund ...

  • Local horseshoe players 'talkin' trash, making ringers'
    The sharp, sustained clang of steel striking steel repeats again and again for nearly three hours every Wednesday evening at Elk's Riverside Park.