You guys are good! I paid $135 and really like the eye appeal of this one. I would call it a 65+ but that's just me
You know Heavy you should send it down to me so it could spend the holidays with its family there's about 10 or so brothers and sisters right here.
Well @Paddy54 she IS gonna be in my showcase, being offered for sale on thanksgiving weekend at the Don Scott antique show (Ohio State Fairgrounds) If I don't get my asking price, I will PM ya
Well all I can say is that she be a lot happier sitting here with her family sipping "Lewis eggnog" BTW some of the best eggnog known to mankind and Morgan silver dollars. Still made the old fashion way from very contented cows and free range happy go lucky chicken eggs. Yes this is the Lewis Delaware dairy! Can you picture sitting around the Aluminum pole airing grievances sipping eggnog......and then feats of strength. Another Festivus miracle!
Eggnog intolerance. Similar to my fruitcake intolorance. Now a good hot spiced rum is a different story
Dear Secret Santa Cascade would like a Morgan dollar shaped Fruit cake to Vam. Then and only then he could be "Master of his Domain "
Gentlemen, let's take a deep breath, go have a glass of adult beverage, turn it to ESPN, and root for America's team »»»»» Bengals
I totally disagree with this personally. The reason is, all coins in a given series are not the same and were not made under the same conditions. An 1880-S and an 1892-O Morgan were created under very different conditions and thus should be graded accordingly. The finest 1892-O is going to be different than the finest 1880-S because of this and the grading should reflect that. It's not to help with populations either...it's simply a fact of how they were made. They are very different coins.