A Question for the Old Timers

Discussion in 'US Coins Forum' started by mikenoodle, Jul 12, 2022.

  1. mikenoodle

    mikenoodle The Village Idiot Supporter

    has anyone here ever seen an encased $2.50 gold piece? I never had until the other day.

    anyone ever seen one?

    8C946909-645D-4B28-91EC-8DE740D30F2B.jpeg A59134D3-A36C-4513-967E-E64846172703.jpeg
     
    Last edited: Jul 12, 2022
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  3. Collecting Nut

    Collecting Nut Borderline Hoarder

    Yes but I wasn’t interested. It was over 25 years ago and I felt it was too much.
     
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  4. Treashunt

    Treashunt The Other Frank

    ditto, about the same time period
     
    Collecting Nut likes this.
  5. Treashunt

    Treashunt The Other Frank

    Who ya calling OLD!?

    Doug?

    Oh, okay
     
    MIGuy, CoinCorgi, ldhair and 2 others like this.
  6. medoraman

    medoraman Supporter! Supporter

    I have seen them. 1000 times scarcer than pennies, but they are around.

    Quarter eagles were weird animals, not really circulating in commerce, and the main demand yearly being for current dated year issues for Christmas bonus gifts. After they got turned into banks they kind of just sat there. That is why there were gaps in issuance years.
     
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  7. fretboard

    fretboard Defender of Old Coinage!

    First time is today for me, guess I don't get out much! :smuggrin:
     
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  8. Mountain Man

    Mountain Man Well-Known Member

    Never. Thanks for the post.
     
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  9. Clawcoins

    Clawcoins Damaging Coins Daily

    I've seen them in rings inserted in to a ring bezel but not a "Christmas coin/token"


    Who's an Old Timer ??
     
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  10. Collecting Nut

    Collecting Nut Borderline Hoarder

    Not me, that’s for sure!
     
  11. mrweaseluv

    mrweaseluv Supporter! Supporter

    1st time i've seen an encased gold that wasn't "jewelry"...
     
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  12. lordmarcovan

    lordmarcovan 48-year collector Moderator

    Never seen one, no. That's amazing. Must've been a pretty high class organization to give those out. (Unless they were sold as family gifts?)
     
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  13. asheland

    asheland The Silver Lion

    Never seen one, super cool!
    That is one denomination I have multiples of, several UNC, and a few southern examples, but nothing incased like that.
     
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  14. Kentucky

    Kentucky Well-Known Member

    In the 50's I was in a coin shop when a man brought one in to sell he had gotten as a penny!!!
     
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  15. lordmarcovan

    lordmarcovan 48-year collector Moderator

    Not an encased one, surely?
     
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  16. Kentucky

    Kentucky Well-Known Member

    Nah, just one he got in change at a store...
     
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  17. KBBPLL

    KBBPLL Well-Known Member

    As a Christmas gift it was probably appreciated. The average wage in 1900 was 22 cents an hour, $450 a year. I've never seen one personally but that doesn't mean I'm not an old timer.
     
  18. -jeffB

    -jeffB Greshams LEO Supporter

    My Dad still occasionally mentions seeing some in a cabinet at his childhood home. I think at one point he said someone gave one to each of the kids as a Christmas present. It's a bit surprising, because he would've been 5 in 1933, and his was not a wealthy family.
     
  19. KBBPLL

    KBBPLL Well-Known Member

    You reminded me that my grandfather socked away some crisp 1935 $1 silver certificates, and us 6 grandkids each got one some time in the 1970s. It was the height of the Great Depression and he was a railroad worker. I always wondered how he managed that.
     
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  20. -jeffB

    -jeffB Greshams LEO Supporter

    Mom's parents got off to a good start, with several thousand dollars in the bank -- all lost when the banks closed. Mom's earliest memory was of sitting on her mother's lap on the front stoop, watching her father walk up, while her mother asked "did you find any work today?"

    He went on to work for the railroad (office work) until his retirement, and one of my first memories is going to his retirement dinner. I found out only many years later that he was one of the organizers for the railway workers' union -- so he's one of the people we have to thank for the 8-hour workday and the five-day workweek (it was 12/7 when he started). No, I don't believe that the Great Depression was caused by those sorts of extravagant worker demands. :rolleyes:
     
  21. medoraman

    medoraman Supporter! Supporter

    I don't think anyone who has studied labor history would think the union movement was unreasonable when it began. Too bad the history was so adversarial, affecting up to present day animosity in labor relations. Japanese unions are a much healthier relationship and mutually beneficial.
     
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