Coins in Movies - To Kill A Mockingbird (Indian-Head Pennies)

Discussion in 'US Coins Forum' started by willieboyd2, Jul 23, 2010.

  1. willieboyd2

    willieboyd2 First Class Poster

    I like to find literary references to coins in novels or non-fiction books.
    Here is one of the more interesting ones.

    The novel To Kill A Mockingbird by Harper Lee, published in 1960 by
    HarperCollins Publishers, Inc., became a best-seller and won several literary prizes.

    The book's 50th anniversary (July 11, 2010) of publication was reported on several news outlets.

    The book mentions Indian-Head pennies early on.

    Scout and Jem, two children in Alabama in 1933, find a pair of such pennies and discuss them.
    Scout is narrating.

    Inside were two scrubbed and polished pennies, one on top of the other.
    Jem examined them.
    "Indian-heads," he said. "Nineteen-six and Scout, one of 'em's nineteen-hundred.
    These are real old."
    "Nineteen-hundred," I echoed. "Say---"

    "I don't know, Scout. But these are important to somebody...."
    "How's that, Jem...?"
    "Well, Indian-heads --- well, they come from the Indians.
    They're real strong magic, they make you have good luck.
    Not like fried chicken when you're not lookin' for it,
    but things like long life 'n' good health, 'n' passin' six-weeks test...
    these are real valuable to somebody. I'm gonna put 'em in my trunk."


    [​IMG]
    Indian-Head penny 1900

    [​IMG]
    Indian-Head penny 1906

    I added the film to the Coins in Movies section of my website.

    The titles are narrated by an adult woman remembering her childhood in early
    1930's Alabama.

    A pair of hands open a cigar box displaying, among other things,
    Indian Head and Lincoln pennies

    [​IMG]
    A 1907 Indian Head penny and two 1960 Lincoln pennies.

    The 1960 pennies and the film's setting in the 1930's is sometimes considered a "goof"
    but the adult woman narrating the titles makes it clear that the events in the film
    occured a long time ago in her childhood.

    :)
     
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  3. krispy

    krispy krispy

  4. dimeguy

    dimeguy Dime Enthusiast

    Not a movie, but the Simpsons had a subplot of Bart learning how to collect coins with his father. Naturally, the last coin in his album to fill was the 1917 Kissing Lincoln:

    kissing lincoln.jpg

    Naturally the entire thing is a satire on coin collectors (may fall well into the Coin Collectors are Sad People thread). Still...very humerous.
     
  5. dimeguy

    dimeguy Dime Enthusiast

    Oh, and just a second thought...how can we forget about The Dark Knight. Two Face makes a decision through a doubled face 1922 Peace Dollar:

    101.jpg
     
  6. Hunt1

    Hunt1 Active Member

    Man we read that book in school was one of my favorites!
     
  7. stealer

    stealer Roller of Coins

    You beat me to it! ;)
     
  8. panda

    panda Junior Member

    the movie titanic.

    rose(winslet) gives jack(DiCaprio) a 1912-S Barber dime in exchange for drawling her naked. they show the dime for a second or two.
    http://www.ketzer.com/movie_props_replicas/titanic_dime.jpg
    not very likely she would have a 1912-S barber dime, at that point of time and where she lived but whatever.

    edit: it won't let me show the picture, so you have to click on the link.
     
  9. majorbigtime

    majorbigtime New Member

    I have seen stage prop coins that remotely look like Barbers.
     
  10. coervi

    coervi Lincoln Collector

    Dear John is a good one, Johns father is a coin collecter.
     
  11. Big Tay

    Big Tay New Member

    In the movie Iron Jawed Angels there is a coin flipping scene at the beginning of the movie. Looks like a Barber half or quarter. I was watching it with someone though and couldn't pause it to get a better look. :)
     
  12. Pilkenton

    Pilkenton almost uncirculated

    I was watching Dragnet and Joe Friday's partner Gannon wanted a cup of coffee, so Joe tossed him a 1964 quarter.
     
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