Right now, I'm concentrating on the "Little Sisters", Half Cents. I had an old Library of Coins album I bought in the early '60s. This album had gathered dust for years which once held a number of goodies long since sold many years ago. I guess it enticed me to try get some holes filled. Well, I got a few half cents and found that some of the holes were improperly punched. So, a new Dansco album was the way to go.
I find these early coppers fascinating, sort of a link with our founding fathers. The oldest I've got so far is an 1803 Half Cent, which lets me touch the time of Thomas Jefferson as President. I went to a coin show last weekend and one dealer had a beautiful 1793 Half Cent, the first half cent minted for the new America for general circulation, for only $18500. However, he let me look at it and hold the coin which was in a slab and graded EF-40. Got me thinking how this coin made it through over two centuries in such a museum quality condition. This coin was put away when George Washington was still President, probably a new and shiny copper then; the light wear it has now most likely due to the handling of this heirloom by the families that owned it over the past two centuries. Anyway, there is something special about collecting coins minted in the early days of America.
