Post your under $50.00 purchase...

Discussion in 'US Coins Forum' started by jtlee321, Sep 4, 2016.

  1. H8_modern

    H8_modern Attracted to small round-ish art

    I'm in Virginia so I pick up anything local plus I like encased cents so I was thrilled to get this one for $20 or so

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  3. TypeCoin971793

    TypeCoin971793 Just a random guy on the internet

  4. jtlee321

    jtlee321 Well-Known Member

    Just picked these up from a pawn shop. I've been in this shop several times and over the last several months have had no coin in at all. Today they had a whole bunch.. These are my under $50.00 purchases from there.

    $3.50 was mixed in with a bunch of other Washington Quarters in a box.
    1932-S-Washington-Quarter-Obverse.jpg 1932-S-Washington-Quarter-Reverse.jpg

    $8.00 1964-D Kennedy Half Dollar TDO FS-103
    1964-D-Kennedy-Half-Dollar-Obverse.jpg 1964-D-Kennedy-Half-Dollar-Reverse.jpg
     
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  5. TypeCoin971793

    TypeCoin971793 Just a random guy on the internet

    Still waiting to pull something like that out of the junk quarter bin.

    I recently got a BU TDO 1964 D half as well for melt.
     
  6. jtlee321

    jtlee321 Well-Known Member

    The half is not worth a lot, but it sure is pretty strong and is visible under 3x magnification. So I will alway's pick those up for melt. :)
     
  7. SuperDave

    SuperDave Free the Cartwheels!

    Still winning. :)
     
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  8. Skyman

    Skyman Well-Known Member

  9. Brett_in_Sacto

    Brett_in_Sacto Well-Known Member

    Buried at the bottom of a coin pile in an ash tray labeled "Russian and Yugoslavian coins" at a local auction house. Total cost - $28.00 with premium.

    Some day I'll get around to reviewing the rest of the coins that were in the pile.

    :cigar::cigar::cool:

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  10. Phil Ham

    Phil Ham Hamster

    Almost all of my coin purchases are less than $50 but here is one of my better deals for $2.
    1901B Swiss 2 Franc - Obverse.JPG 1901B Swiss 2 Franc - Reverse.JPG
     
  11. SuperDave

    SuperDave Free the Cartwheels!

    Wow.

    For those keeping score, 1901 is the Key Date of the series, a 5-figure coin in Mint State and probably a ~$100 coin as shown here.
     
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  12. jtlee321

    jtlee321 Well-Known Member

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  13. jtlee321

    jtlee321 Well-Known Member

    Here's one I just picked up today from a bullion shop.

    $50.00 right at the threshold of this thread. :)

    1893-CC-Morgan-Dollar-Obverse.jpg 1893-CC-Morgan-Dollar-Reverse.jpg
     
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  14. Cascade

    Cascade CAC Grader, Founding Member

    Does free count?

    After I expressed interest in a couple copper pieces (he knows that's unusual for me) a good friend just have them to me, insisted really. I liked how large the broadstruck was plus the cool looking split-plate doubling it has and I've never had an atheist cent. Funny thing is he's a pastor and had no idea that's what they're called lol.

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    Last edited: Oct 26, 2016
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  15. jtlee321

    jtlee321 Well-Known Member


    Free totally counts!! Here's one for you Chris.. "Free is a very good price!"

     
  16. lordmarcovan

    lordmarcovan 48-year collector Moderator

    $35.60. Tinsmithing tools on an 1853 dime. Pretty neat, if you ask me.

    (Actually, I've got a ton of other <$50 stuff.)

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  17. TypeCoin971793

    TypeCoin971793 Just a random guy on the internet

  18. lordmarcovan

    lordmarcovan 48-year collector Moderator

    This excellent and scarce pictorial love token on a two-cent piece cost me fifty bucks. It was featured in Tom Delorey's cover article about love tokens in this February's issue COINage magazine.

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  19. lordmarcovan

    lordmarcovan 48-year collector Moderator

    This World War I trench art love token on a French franc cost me $37.03.

    I then researched it and found the backstory of the soldier who had commissioned it as a gift for his mother. There is even a picture of him. Like so many stories from the Great War, this turned out to be a tragic one of a promising life cut short. I'll paste my writeup about it below. The new owner of this piece says he is going to donate it to the Candadian War Museum, and I can't think of a better place for it to go.

    "Bertha's Boy"

    World War I love token on 1916 French franc, from a fallen Canadian soldier to his mother


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    Larger obverse picture

    Larger reverse picture

    Host coin: 1916 French 1-franc piece, KM844.1, .835 silver/.1342 oz., 23 mm. Obverse: original French "Sower" design, unaltered. Reverse: "1 Franc" and olive branch planed off, date and legends intact, re-engraved "Bertha / V. Shaver / Montreal / Canada" in script. Ex-"pondcollections" (eBay), 2/9/2016.

    World War I "trench art" pieces and love tokens are commonly found on the French 1- and 2-franc "Sower" coins of the period. This one is visually unremarkable, though the engraved script was well done. At first glance, it's not even as interesting as the "dog tag" or "ID badge" pieces that typically bear a soldier's name, service number, and/or unit.

    However, I decided to research it because of the presence of a full name (first, last, and middle initial), to see if I could pin down more information about the onetime owner of this piece. It turned out I found very little about Bertha V. Shaver of Montreal, Canada, who was obviously the recipient of the love token, but through her name, I was able to determine with a reasonable amount of certainty that the engraving was commissioned by her son, Harold Clinton Shaver, who was serving with the Canadian Army Medical Service in France during the Great War.

    Since the date was left intact on the host coin, we know it was engraved no earlier than 1916. Of course the war ended in November of 1918, but the life of Private Harold Shaver was tragically cut short before that, on May 20, 1918, from wounds suffered the day before in a German air raid on the hospital he was probably working in. Thus we can pretty definitively date the engraving on the coin to sometime between October of 1917, when Harold Shaver enlisted, and May 19, 1918, when he was mortally wounded.

    As a further compelling detail to this poignant tale, I discovered a newspaper photograph of Harold Clinton Shaver on the Canadian Virtual War Memorial website. So this is now the second time I've been able to "put a face to the coin", and it was a young and handsome face at that.

    May Harold and Bertha Shaver rest in peace, and I hope the joy of their eventual reunion in heaven eclipsed the suffering they experienced during their earthly existence.

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    Data source: Canadian Virtual War Memorial

    (Note that there are some minor discrepancies in the sources. His death date was given as May 19th below, though that was the date of his wounding. He died on May 20th.)

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    Data source: Canadian Great War Project
     
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  20. TypeCoin971793

    TypeCoin971793 Just a random guy on the internet

    Incredible story @lordmarcovan ! Such a coin would be priceless to me, and I feel it does belong in a museum. I love how one can narrow a coin down to a specific place and time in history

    So you bought it, did research, and sold it to someone else who is going to donate the coin to a museum?
     
  21. lordmarcovan

    lordmarcovan 48-year collector Moderator

    Thanks. Yep, that's pretty much how it happened.

    This is the neat thing about love tokens, particularly those with a full name on them. You can often track down the original owners.

    Sometimes a photograph of the owner, who's been dead more than a century.

    Sometimes a colorful newspaper article about them.

    Sometimes a tragedy from long ago, as was also the case of Private Harold Shaver above.

    This 18th century piece barely missed qualifying for this thread, because I paid all of $51.66 for it after shipping. But what an interesting backstory it proved to have!
     
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