Key Date Jefferson.

Discussion in 'Coin Roll Hunting' started by Amberlarry22, Mar 16, 2021.

  1. Amberlarry22

    Amberlarry22 Well-Known Member

    Look through alot of Nickels I think This is Only my 2nd. The other is very worn. Key Date. 7.8 million minted. Little greaser on the Reverse. 20210316_110522.jpg 20210316_110610.jpg
     
  2. Avatar

    Guest User Guest



    to hide this ad.
  3. Mr.Q

    Mr.Q Well-Known Member

    Nice looking Jefferson, I like it.
     
    Amberlarry22 likes this.
  4. Mac McDonald

    Mac McDonald Well-Known Member

    Help, please...unless I'm missing something besides my wife's birth year, what is "key date" about this, or...?
     
    Cheech9712 likes this.
  5. Collecting Nut

    Collecting Nut Borderline Hoarder

    The key to this series is the 1950-D.
     
    capthank, eddiespin and Penny Luster like this.
  6. GH#75

    GH#75 Trying to get 8 hours of sleep in 4. . .

    That's the rarest type... In nickels, there aren't many that are worth more than a dollar, so ones like this get lumped in with the key dates.
     
    Cheech9712 and capthank like this.
  7. Collecting Nut

    Collecting Nut Borderline Hoarder

    Lumping? Never heard of lumping with coins. Mashed potatoes yes, coins no.
     
    1stSgt22, eddiespin and GH#75 like this.
  8. eddiespin

    eddiespin Fast Eddie

    There's nothing "greaser" about that reverse. Just stick to finding them for now, Larry.
     
    Last edited: Mar 16, 2021
    Stevearino, 1stSgt22 and capthank like this.
  9. manny9655

    manny9655 Well-Known Member

    It's my birth year too. 7.9 million minted, the only ones lower are the 1950-D, 1938-D and-S, 1939-D and S, and 1951S. So I guess you could call the 1955-P a "semi-key", but the only real "key date" is the 50-D
     
    1stSgt22 and capthank like this.
  10. masterswimmer

    masterswimmer A Caretaker, can't take it with me

    I'm not feeling the key date label either. Lesser mintage than other years? For certain. That doesn't make it a key date.

    Now don't flame me on this. Just my opinion, not full steps ;)
     
    1stSgt22 and manny9655 like this.
  11. Amberlarry22

    Amberlarry22 Well-Known Member

    Key Date for me! Havent found 2 many. JMO!
     
    mike estes likes this.
  12. 1865King

    1865King Well-Known Member

    Not really a key date. Even the 1950-D was once claimed to be the key date but, its easier to find one in mint state verses worn. Lay were horded. I can think of two dates that may be considered key the 94 and 95 matt finish.
     
    1stSgt22 likes this.
  13. eddiespin

    eddiespin Fast Eddie

    You're a little on the excited side. There's no need to explain it's just your opinion, we know it. But you should try to learn right, as it will pay dividends in the long-run.
     
  14. manny9655

    manny9655 Well-Known Member

    And the 2009s from all mints. I still haven't seen one in circulation.
     
    1865King likes this.
  15. mike estes

    mike estes Well-Known Member

    nice coin Amberlarry22, and it being KEY to you is just fine.....:happy::happy::happy:
     
  16. Kevin Mader

    Kevin Mader Fellow Coin Enthusiast Supporter

    As our fellow enthusiasts note, the 1950 D is considered the Key Date for the series, but there are several Semi Key Dates for the series. 1938D and S, 1939 D and S, and a few of the other low mintage Jeffersons (usually those under 10M). However, there are a number of 'common' date/mm that are desirable. 1942 D, 1955, and 1958 come to mind. The 1955 above appears to be from the sharper obverse die set, which are even harder to find for the date. Most found in circulation will be the washed out obverse design. Taking a look at my circulation roll set, I have a roll of them, so I eventually hit that milestone, but my 1942 D roll is about 3/4 there with twice as many produced. It may be a location thing (closer to Philly than to Denver). It's all relative.
     
  17. Cheech9712

    Cheech9712 Every thing is a guess

    Not a key date. 38’s arnt key dates either
     
  18. Mac McDonald

    Mac McDonald Well-Known Member

    Well aware of the 50-D status, but the coin photo posted with the key date reference is/was a 1955 (P)...??? That was the reason for my question.
     
    Kevin Mader likes this.
  19. Mac McDonald

    Mac McDonald Well-Known Member

    I had/have never even considered it a key date...still don't...so didn't mean to disappoint any enthusiasm.
     
  20. Kevin Mader

    Kevin Mader Fellow Coin Enthusiast Supporter

    No worries, I understood the point of your comment, but just wanted to offer that many folks, including CRH enthusiasts, don't realize there are hidden 'goodies' in the coins they might otherwise see as Common and pass right over.

    To your point of not considering the 50 D as a Key Date, what makes it 'key' isn't necessarily the same criteria that makes another coin in another series, 'key'. As I'm sure you are aware, 50 D's in BU condition are easier and cheaper to come by than a number of other Jefferson nickels. Knowing you can buy one cheap might not make it 'key' for some folks. But finding a worn 50D in circulation, a real challenge. In building my roll set, I've found some dates very challenging over the years. Other years a breeze to build in AU/BU grades. Some challenging common dates as I recall (probably several more I'm missing without looking at the set):

    1942 D in VF or better condition
    1951/1951 D in VF or better condition
    1952 D in XF or better condition
    1970s nickels in AU/BU condition
    1982 P and D in XF or better condition especially AU or better
    1983 P and D in XF or better condition especially AU or better
    1984 P in AU or better condition
    1986 D in AU or better condition

    When you find an AU/BU specimen of these, they are likely worth more than most/all of the older Jeffersons a CRH enthusiast normally pulls from circulation. And when folks factor in the varieties, most of these are worth more too. But to each their own...including how they feel about definitions like 'key'. I think that those building circulation sets will have a broader definition relative to the time and volume committed to that endeavor. I know my definition has changed relative to my own experiences with CRH events.
     
Draft saved Draft deleted

Share This Page