You Think The US Mint Will Ever Sell Historic Coins?

Discussion in 'Coin Chat' started by fretboard, Jun 22, 2021.

  1. fretboard

    fretboard Defender of Old Coinage!

    john65999 and OldSilverDollar like this.
  2. Avatar

    Guest User Guest



    to hide this ad.
  3. baseball21

    baseball21 Well-Known Member

    At some point probably to some extent. It takes some effort to set it up though and I don't think they have a ton of interest in it. I think its more likely they'll start selling some modern graded products directly like the England does but I dont think theyre in a hurry to do either
     
    sel w likes this.
  4. scottishmoney

    scottishmoney Buh bye

    I sure hope not. The BRM is charging egregious prices for what are really not stellar pieces. They have a buyer on staff that gets stuff in quantities on auction sites etc to sell at full/fool retail.
     
    sel w likes this.
  5. manny9655

    manny9655 Well-Known Member

    If they do, their website will crash after all the dealers buy them all up.
     
    sel w, Chris Winkler, wxcoin and 2 others like this.
  6. Hiwatt

    Hiwatt Coffee break

    It's not a bad idea, despite the presumably high prices. It could bring more visibility and awareness to collecting which would be good. I know I'd be more likely to browse the mint website too if it had some surprises there from time to time.
     
    sel w likes this.
  7. Conder101

    Conder101 Numismatist

    The Mint? No. The GSA? Yes, and they did 1972 - 74 and 1980. Who knows maybe someday they will sell off the hoard of Small size dollars in storage. (Not likely those will eventually be disbursed.) But how many Ike dollars is the Federal Reserve still sitting on?
     
    sel w, capthank and John Burgess like this.
  8. fretboard

    fretboard Defender of Old Coinage!

    Yeah, they must have plenty of leftovers. It would be a great time for the Mint to sell Silver. Maybe even 40% Ike's! :D
     
    sel w likes this.
  9. Mr.Q

    Mr.Q Well-Known Member

    They may duplicate as they did the Morgan and Peace Silver Dollars. Dealers first, all others, sold out. This a a recording, please call back, we will answer your call when we wake up. Please do not hold your breath, as we do not know CPR. Dial 911 for further assistance, thanks for calling.
     
    Dug13, tibor, fretboard and 1 other person like this.
  10. CygnusCC

    CygnusCC Roping the Learns Supporter

    I don't know enough about the mint's standard security practices. Do they keep old master dies or destroy them? It would be fascinating to see them somehow transfer (hub?) the work onto a new die for a limited release. Sort of a way to bring back artistry of the old masters on a newly minted coin. I'd buy that.
     
    green18 and sel w like this.
  11. TheFinn

    TheFinn Well-Known Member

    Everything else they sell is overpriced, so, this only makes sense to generate revenue without having to make anything.
     
    sel w likes this.
  12. John Burgess

    John Burgess Well-Known Member

    this isn't much different than the GSA dollars, except for the invention of the third party grading company and the internet although I'm not sure what they are trying to do here, become a coin dealer or what..... it's perplexing, I had thought they were doing it out of old stock and stuff, but that doesn't seem to be the case.

    meh, it's nothing at all like the GSA dollars. LOL

    speaking of Ike dollars, I went to my credit union last friday and they had accumulated $25 in half dollars and two ike dollars. gimme gimme gimme.

    all clad, but so what, they all can't be winners. Ikes went towards my collection, ya just don't see them every day anymore.
     
    sel w and capthank like this.
  13. CaptHenway

    CaptHenway Survivor

    Remember when Canada sold 1912-1914 five and ten dollar gold coins from its vaults.
     
    tibor, fretboard and sel w like this.
  14. baseball21

    baseball21 Well-Known Member

    In terms of England they are actively acting as a dealer on items of their choice which have been foreign, modern, ancient, graded and raw, older products of theirs they bought back etc etc etc. It seems if they think its popular and fairly easy to move and they can make money on it they will
     
    sel w likes this.
  15. Collecting Nut

    Collecting Nut Borderline Hoarder

    Probably but not in my lifetime.
     
    CygnusCC, fretboard and sel w like this.
  16. capthank

    capthank Well-Known Member

    Nice. My bank called me when they received 50 Ike dollars. I was happy to buy them.
     
    John Burgess, tibor and sel w like this.
  17. fretboard

    fretboard Defender of Old Coinage!

    That's great, someone likes you! :D
     
  18. Mac McDonald

    Mac McDonald Well-Known Member

    It's not the Royal Mint that's the fool, it's the buyer(s). As the saying goes, it doesn't hurt to ask/offer. It's only crazy to pay those full/fool prices.:woot:
     
    scottishmoney likes this.
  19. whopper64

    whopper64 Well-Known Member

    My recollection of the "horde" sales was for coins already minted and stored. I doubt if the U.S. Mint will ever again strike "historic" coins with the "historic" date since they have so many problems with their current mintage, and, I would imagine, quite restrictive laws that they must conform with. I do remember the 1776-1976 coinage to commemorate the 200th anniversary of the Declaration of Independence but only on certain coins. I was surprised that they didn't recognize the 200th anniversary of the Constitution in 1989 with a 1789-1989 configuration.
     
  20. baseball21

    baseball21 Well-Known Member

    Every single coin including what they struck yesterday will one day be "historic".
     
  21. 1865King

    1865King Well-Known Member

    They have some of the older master dies. However, I don't think would that difficult for them the recreate a set of dies for any coin that was struck at the mint. They did a good job in 2016 when they produced the 100 year anniversary gold coins of Mercury dime, Standing Liberty quarter or the Walking Liberty half dollar or even the current obverse of the silver eagle dollars.
     
    CygnusCC likes this.
Draft saved Draft deleted

Share This Page