If the coins show no wear they are uncirculated, no matter who rolled them. If not then ANY business strike coin that the grader does not personally see removed from a mint set, Mint sold roll, or mint sewn bag, can be graded no higher than AU-58. Pretty much 99% of all the MS slabbed coins should now be considered to be AU with this logic.
So, if I break out one of my MS60-66 coins, put it in a bank roll and deposit it, then someone else goes CRH and gets/finds it in the same condition I placed it in the roll, does that make it AU or less? Uncirculated is not straight from the mint where no one touched/handled/spent it. It is a coin that has no 'wear' and still has luster.
A grade assigned to a coin describes its condition, NOT its history. They could indeed be Uncirculated. (One of many things I learned here at CoinTalk) .That’s a sweet find Brina!!
Customer wrapped rolls of halves are the best! I always ask when I'm in any bank....Congrats on a great score!!!!
It obvious that a few here have great lives, since they have zero positive to say (except for the thousands of Silvers they find and post in CRH). 'Bout to do some math here too from CRH posts; I think 1 in particular must have 2-3% of all Silver Kennedy's ever minted
You're overreacting to Brina overreacting — and more importantly, misunderstanding — something someone else said. There's been no throwing of shade on anybody's good time on this thread.
Uncirculated refers to a state of preservation, not their history of usage. If there is no visible wear, it is uncirculated - no matter how many times it has changed hands. And congrats to the OP on a fantastic find.
True story: Years ago my son, then in his early 20's told me that when I go he planned to roll up all of my coins & 'cash them in' at the bank. He expected me to get upset. I simply told him two things: 1) I'll be dead & won't care much. 2) he is the one who will lose out, since he'll lose many thousands of $'s.