Canon Shooter
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- Jan 7, 2020
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My aunt passed away a few years ago, and my brother and I were her only living heirs.
One of the things we inherited from her was a very large collection of old coins, dating from the mid-1800's to the latter part of the 20th century. I'd wager that 85% of the coins are silver. I've spent the better part of the last year going through them all, one by one, doing research on the web, and documenting some of the more interesting pieces.
The vast majority of them are only going to be worth their melt value, and I've got a local guy who's going to buy those. But he got a bit excited when I told him about one of the coins I found, a 1921 Peace Dollar:
The Peace Dollar was minted from 1921 through 1928, and then again in 1934 and 1935. The first one was struck on December 28, 1921. All of the Peace Dollars which bear a 1921 date were struck in Philadelphia, so there's no mint mark on them. The Mint later reported that 1,006,473 pieces were struck in 1921, a rate of output for the four days remaining in the year that would've been amazing. It's speculated that the minting of 1921 Peace dollars continued into 1922.
All of the 1921 Peace Dollars were minted in "high relief", but this took a very definite toll on the dies. Only about 1% of all Peace Dollars were high relief. A handful of 1922 Peace Dollars were high relief. One of those can be worth as much as $140K.
Ours isn't worth quite that, but my coin guy said it might be worth a couple hundred bucks. Glad I went through all of those coins! There were some others I pulled aside, as well, including an 1882 Morgan silver dollar, and a seated Liberty quarter from 1870, which is worth about $70.
Anyone else into old coins?
One of the things we inherited from her was a very large collection of old coins, dating from the mid-1800's to the latter part of the 20th century. I'd wager that 85% of the coins are silver. I've spent the better part of the last year going through them all, one by one, doing research on the web, and documenting some of the more interesting pieces.
The vast majority of them are only going to be worth their melt value, and I've got a local guy who's going to buy those. But he got a bit excited when I told him about one of the coins I found, a 1921 Peace Dollar:
The Peace Dollar was minted from 1921 through 1928, and then again in 1934 and 1935. The first one was struck on December 28, 1921. All of the Peace Dollars which bear a 1921 date were struck in Philadelphia, so there's no mint mark on them. The Mint later reported that 1,006,473 pieces were struck in 1921, a rate of output for the four days remaining in the year that would've been amazing. It's speculated that the minting of 1921 Peace dollars continued into 1922.
All of the 1921 Peace Dollars were minted in "high relief", but this took a very definite toll on the dies. Only about 1% of all Peace Dollars were high relief. A handful of 1922 Peace Dollars were high relief. One of those can be worth as much as $140K.
Ours isn't worth quite that, but my coin guy said it might be worth a couple hundred bucks. Glad I went through all of those coins! There were some others I pulled aside, as well, including an 1882 Morgan silver dollar, and a seated Liberty quarter from 1870, which is worth about $70.
Anyone else into old coins?