Not the greatest photos in the world for seeing the coins, but eh, what can you do. Haven't gotten around to individually imaging them all yet (indeed, I wonder if that will ever happen at all).
Wash yer mouth out with soap! I would never drill them. Aside from being economically stupid (by ruining good coins), that would be "cheating" for a true holey collector to do that. All of those holes are at least a century old.
Thanks. It might stretch some people's definition of "wonderful" a bit. But hey, sometimes wounded coins need some lovin', too.
I love the mounting technique!!! In theory, you could have used staples , but the pins are way better!!!
Looks great! I will get back to mine in a few months when things calm down. I have most, but I don't think I will ever find a twenty cent piece to complete it.
My first coin purchases since January were for this holey cork board collection. The quarter was cheap. I overpaid slightly for the 20c piece. By my reckoning, I now need only the following to complete this collection: Braided Hair half cent Barber half Seated dollar with motto Trade dollar
Ive seen quite a few holed trades. Often chopmarked too as they were in the Asian market. Seen with motto seated before too but not many. Actually I have a killer barber half you may like. Beauty of an original au. But holed.
When I was a kid, in 1977, I met an old Black man in a nursing home in Fernandina, Florida (we kids were volunteering to read to the residents). They said it was his 114th birthday, and that he had been born in the year of Emancipation, in 1863. (Meaning he would've already been 102 when I was born.) Now, if you look at modern records on supercentenarians, I'm not sure if any male has had a documented lifespan that long, aside from one Japanese gentleman who lived to 116. Having been born to former slaves on a plantation, this man's records might not have survived anyway. So he was not a documented supercentenarian. So maybe he was 114 and maybe he wasn't. But he was easily 100+ years old. He was blind, but could walk with a walker, and shook my hand and said, "Pleased to meet you". I remember my own great-grandfather, who was born in 1879.
Gosh, I never thought about it that way and it seems crazy. I remember my great-grandmother, who was born in 1887, and my great-grandfather on the other side who must have been born in the late 1870s or early 1880s, since that grandfather was born in 1900.
Both my grandmother and grandfather were born in the 1800's, barely. 1893/1894 and were born in Italy but it's unclear when they came in off the boat per se. I always wanted to look that up, hmmm??