by 68Camaro » Thu Nov 13, 2014 8:04 pm
I don't have any special knowledge but I have a hard time believing they would have survived to any significant extent past 1969 in the face of both collector demand and "the great melt" demand - for which the silver dollars would have been the desirable to pull at face value, given higher silver content per buck than the fractional. The big melt started in May 67 when silver spiked to $2/oz and melting silver coin was made illegal and lasted until May 1969 when the price had dropped back (some), the cuni coin had taken over, and the ban was lifted. I was aware of the change in 64 as a kid, and aware of the transition to cuni and the decline of coin in circulation, but silver coin was still available in change and not shockingly unusual through the 70s, even though on the wane and no longer normative. I pulled out the older coin (mercs, etc) and kept them even as a kid.
To add to this, breakeven at face was roughly $1.40/oz for fractional, and by 1971 the price of silver was (briefly) below that. It took a lot of paranoia for people of the time to save their change when face was equal to melt. For silver dollars the breakeven point was a slightly higher spot price but the trend remained the same.
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