by Know Common Cents » Tue Oct 11, 2011 10:40 am
Steel cents? BAH! I know they served a useful purpose in WWII and think they look superb in Unc to high mint state condition. The ones I've encountered in the wild are pretty much reduced to heavily rusted disks. It's been almost 70 years since the were minted. That begs the questions:
Why haven't they been previously snagged by a magnet in the bank or Fed Reserve sorting process?
How'd they get so damn rusty? That didn't happen overnight.
If the rusty ones were plentiful, I'd gather as many as I could and ship them off to one of the places that reprocesses them into sparkling gems. I think the rusty rolls are bought at about $3 each. Nicely circulated ones are several times that, I believe.
Since they don't exist in large numbers, I usually throw the bad ones away. I know. I know. I'm not in the practice of actually throwing my money away, but do make an exception for the really crusty ones. Couple months ago, I tried leaving a couple of the bad ones in the "Need-a-Penny, Leave-a-Penny" plastic tray at a gas station and the wingnut clerk there yelled at me for leaving rusty "washers" there. I tried a 15 second explanation, but immediately realized the concept of a steel cent went way beyond Goober's thought processes. I grabbed them out of the tray and threw them into the trash on my way out the door. Oh, the humanity!!!
They really were plentiful in the late 1960s. Funny. My Dad, who served in the war, always called them "white pennies." Never understood that, but maybe others have heard them referred to in that way.
"I don't know what I'm doin' but I'm sure havin' fun" Herman Munster
I've recently adopted the Groucho Marx philosophy for dealing with politics and other life challenges, "Whatever it is, I'm against it!" (Horse Feathers 1932)