by Know Common Cents » Tue Mar 15, 2011 8:57 pm
I just have to think back to the silver boom of the late 1970s to reflect on the worth of numismatic coins. I was friends with the shop owner and helped him out with crowd control. The lines were long and part of my job was to count the number of people waiting and report back to him every 15 minutes or so. For my work, he paid me $1 face in US 90% silver (coins of my pick from the ones he had coming in).
It was amazing what was being brought in for melting. There were rolls of BU walkers as well as quarters from the 1930s that must have had an average grade of MS 63. Most everyone had sold off their slicks or culls before the panic really set in, so most of the coins brought in were of higher quality. I remember seeing milk cartons full of standing liberty quarters and Barber halves. All were being cashed in just for their silver content. There was so much coming in so fast that it was impractical to go through everything. The coin shop owner had to process all of this quickly for fear of the price dropping dramatically the next day. Scary stuff when you have tens or hundreds of thousands of dollars hanging by a thread for so many days in a row.
There were also sterling utensils, serving trays, candle sticks and everything else imaginable. Everything went into the melting pot regardless of whether it was common or rare. It boggles my mind to think of all I saw tossed into bags and bins at the time. For my time spent, I selected several XF mintmarked Barber halves, high grade Mercuries from the teens and a couple of VG-F Seated Libery dollars. Wish I would've paid more attention to the silver dollars that came in. I suspect that there were rare dates and CCs, but unless the silver refiners had someone checking their incoming product, it all met the same fate.
I agree that collectible coins will remain so when there's some return to normalcy. Or......maybe IF there's a return to normalcy. I wouldn't buy collectible cents, nickels and the like as those may be the first to be ignored and the last to recover. In fact, I've sold all I had and certainly don't save things like state quarters, new Lincoln cent varieties, Sac or Prez $ coins and the like. If it doesn't have some intrinsic value, send it on down the line.
Part of my intrinsic stash also includes lead. That would be in projectile form to defend my family in the event of what may be coming.
"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)