1914d wheat penny

Discussion in 'What's it Worth' started by Lauramcjk, Nov 14, 2018.

  1. Lauramcjk

    Lauramcjk New Member

    I have a penny collection that was left to me and I am so clueless here. Any help would be great I did find a 1914d penny but all of these really have such a broad spectrum of worth. I wasn't sure if I should sell it separately or if the collection all together is better. None ate really mint and I'm missing some key dates. Can anyone point me in the right direction?here's done pics and please if you are knowledgeable give me a little break I'll answer any questions you have. Thank you in advance for any help at all
     

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  3. Lauramcjk

    Lauramcjk New Member

    This is my full set well as close as I have. I have 3 books like this. Also the next book as well
     

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  4. paddyman98

    paddyman98 I'm a professional expert in specializing! Supporter

    Looks like tape held those Cents in place once.. They have adhesive residue damage now.
     
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  5. Collecting Nut

    Collecting Nut Borderline Hoarder

    Yes to damage even if the tape residue was removed it's still damaged. What a shame. :(
     
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  6. Lauramcjk

    Lauramcjk New Member

    Yeah some still have the tape but it is not sticky
     
  7. Lauramcjk

    Lauramcjk New Member

    So it isn't worth much then??? I had a friend's father offer $100 I didn't want to break up the collection , but I'm paying for a funeral right now so coins didn't seem all that important right now ...
     
  8. Michael K

    Michael K Well-Known Member

    Does acetone work on tape residue?
    I think even in that condition 1914-D's go for twice that. With the tape residue off.
     
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  9. jafo50

    jafo50 Active Member

    That 1914 D is a key coin in the set and I would not sell it especially for $100. Your friend's father is not doing you any favors.
     
  10. Bambam8778

    Bambam8778 Well-Known Member

    I surely wouldn't let the whole book go for $100~~!!!
     
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  11. Lauramcjk

    Lauramcjk New Member

    It was just for the one coin. Thank you all so much for the helpful advice! I love THIS part about the internet. I'm actually really enjoying going through some of these cool coins he had.
     
  12. Shrews1994

    Shrews1994 Collecting is my passion.

    They didn't have a good production that year. Only 1.2 million. 1914 D wheat is good to have. It is valuable.
     
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  13. LA_Geezer

    LA_Geezer Well-Known Member

    If you think you might develop a real interest in coins, then I would keep this 14D by all means. But, as you also mention above that you have a funeral to pay for, then, in the interest of expediency, I would disagree that your friend's father is not doing you any favors.

    I don't have one in any of my various Wheat Cent collections, but I would not want to pay $100 for one either.
     
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  14. AngelDeath

    AngelDeath Well-Known Member

    Use lacquer thinner for the tape.
     
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  15. Michael K

    Michael K Well-Known Member

    ^^^^
    No.
     
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  16. Spark1951

    Spark1951 Accomplishment, not Activity

    @Lauramcjk ...the NGC listing is currently $190.00 for a G4, but yours is damaged and not a full G4 grade. Keep it for a collection, but don't be mislead, that coin is valuable...Spark
     
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  17. justafarmer

    justafarmer Senior Member

    Hard to say for sure - but looks to be OBV #5

    1914 D Map.JPG 1914 D OP Overlay.JPG 1914 OP OBV 5.JPG
     
  18. thomas mozzillo

    thomas mozzillo Well-Known Member

    Selling it all together is always the best way to sell your coins. If you sell them separately the buyer will pick out the key and semi-key coins and leave you with coins that would be difficult to sell.
     
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  19. Lauramcjk

    Lauramcjk New Member

    Should i I get them graded??? See Idk what an inverse #5 even is :(
     
  20. Spark1951

    Spark1951 Accomplishment, not Activity

    The '14-D is borderline because of its rarity/scarcity...imo, yes to that one...but others you would have to determine on a case-by-case basis.

    I think other forum members will agree that, for example you find a coin that is roughly valued at $30 and spend $15-20 to get it slabbed (one coin, mind you) that most folks would buy at $30 but not at $50...unless you found the right buyer.

    I've noticed that coin values of $150-200 are common price points to get a green light on TPG grading and/or attribution from Coin Talk members.

    Part of the fun of collecting, imo, is the research into a coin. @justafarmer ...would be able to help you to find sources to find out for yourself the info on the type of '14-D you have. He has developed extraordinary overlay and mapping expertise as evidenced earlier in this thread. lincolncentresource.com may be one of the sources he consults and would be a good starting point for you...Spark
     
  21. thomas mozzillo

    thomas mozzillo Well-Known Member

    I think the post was obverse # 5. All that refers to is the placement of the D mint mark. If it was my coin I wouldn't send it in for grading. What does the reverse look like?
     
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