Jug full of wheat pennies

Discussion in 'What's it Worth' started by Dustin McDaniel, Dec 13, 2023.

  1. Dustin McDaniel

    Dustin McDaniel Well-Known Member

    Wasn't sure whether to post this in this section or coin chat. Anyway a customer of mine came by my shop yesterday. He is a Walmart manager. I started off by asking him about Coinstar rejects which evolved into other coin conversation.
    He told me he has a big jug, maybe gallon size full of nothing but wheat pennies he inherited from his grandparents. I asked if he wanted to sale them? He said yea probably but not sure what they are worth.
    So without being able to go through and search for key dates what should I be willing to give/offer for them?
     
    lardan likes this.
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  3. Randy Abercrombie

    Randy Abercrombie Supporter! Supporter

    Wow.... Oddly, I helped a friend liquidate his late fathers collection and he too had a glass jug full of wheats... I married up my friend with my dealer buddy and that dealer bought that jug based on weight. He then subsequently divvied the jar up into ziplock bags and sold those too by weight. He never looked at a single cent in that jug..... For the life of me I cannot remember what that dealer paid but I am thinking it ended up being about .03 cents each based on weight alone.
     
  4. Dustin McDaniel

    Dustin McDaniel Well-Known Member

    Seems like it would be worth taking the time to see for more valuable dates.
    I was thinking,
    1. Search valuable dates.
    2. Build a complete set of wheats.
    3. Put the rest away and hopefully copper will climb in value.
    4. Keep key dates and build set then sale the rest and buy silver coins.
     
    Heavymetal likes this.
  5. Randy Abercrombie

    Randy Abercrombie Supporter! Supporter

    It is for coin junkies like us... Not so much from a dealers standpoint though. He can't afford to dedicate hours of his time to hunt down a few coins worth a few dollars in a jugful of untold thousands. Not a practical use of his time.
     
  6. lordmarcovan

    lordmarcovan 48-year collector Moderator

    3 cents apiece is what I would offer.
     
  7. Pickin and Grinin

    Pickin and Grinin Well-Known Member

    I agree with Randy, buy them by weight if you want to hunt for varieties, errors. 3 to 5 cents a coin would be a good start.
     
  8. lardan

    lardan Supporter! Supporter

    I also think you are right, but I would like to have a jug like that to look through at my own pace.
     
  9. Coins4Eli

    Coins4Eli Collector of Early American Copper

    My local coin shop is SELLING them at 3 cents each, and is paying 2 cents each. If I were you I would offer 2.5 cents each rounded up to the nearest cent at the end. :) Also if you don't have a coin counter you can just weigh them, each one should weigh 3.11 grams.
     
    Dustin McDaniel likes this.
  10. PlanoSteve

    PlanoSteve Well-Known Member

    Randy, we don't want you risking your life on a matter such as this...it's probably good that you don't remember! :p:D
     
    Randy Abercrombie likes this.
  11. Kevin Mader

    Kevin Mader Fellow Coin Enthusiast Supporter

    Agree with our fellow enthusiasts. 2-3 cents each, pay by the weight. It would be fun to sift through but it’ll take time. LCS folks will move them in bulk. And more than likely, you’ll build incomplete sets.

    What I would do with the hoard:

    Sort by date and mm
    Variety and error hunt
    Keep a roll by date/mm (highest grades)
    Build a set of the best
    Sell off the bulk

    Have fun most of all!!
     
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