Negro League Commemoratives

Discussion in 'US Coins Forum' started by Asher, Feb 6, 2022.

  1. Asher

    Asher Active Member

    With the base metal half dollar being just under half the price of th 99.9% silver dollar, why is the half-dollar not 99.9% silver at half the weight. You know like in olden times 1789-1964 when coins had silver in ratio of their face value.

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  3. johnmilton

    johnmilton Well-Known Member

    The clad commemorative half dollars are now massively overpriced which is a shame. Time was these coins were cheap enough for YNs to buy them. Now that is no longer the case.

    There used to be educational cards for the YNs with these coins mounted in them. Now those cards seem to have disappeared.

    I say shame on the mint.
     
  4. green18

    green18 Unknown member Sweet on Commemorative Coins

    There are only two silver halfs in the whole commem (modern) run.....I quite agree there should be more of them but the only way for that to happen is to write to our congressmen who introduce the legislation.
     
    Santinidollar likes this.
  5. green18

    green18 Unknown member Sweet on Commemorative Coins

    And the bloody clad halfs are too expensive.....
     
  6. johnmilton

    johnmilton Well-Known Member

    If the mint continues to charge over $30 for the commemorative half dollars, they should be at least 40% clad silver.
     
    Mountain Man and green18 like this.
  7. baseball21

    baseball21 Well-Known Member

    The legislation dictates the half dollars to be clad, they dont have a choice
     
  8. green18

    green18 Unknown member Sweet on Commemorative Coins

    Précisément, mon ami, but if we were to write our desires for silver included in future issues down the road, perhaps our voices would be heard.
     
    Mountain Man likes this.
  9. baseball21

    baseball21 Well-Known Member

    I mean if you can convince enough members of congress theyd get significantly more votes changing how they write the law in the future they'd change it, but I wouldnt hold your breath. While your at it get them to lower the mintage, the 750k mintage is way to high which also turns a lot of people off, I dont think a single one has ever sold out at that number
     
    green18 likes this.
  10. erscolo

    erscolo Well-Known Member

    I pass on the commemorative issues, as they seldom commemorate major milestones and are always way over priced.
     
  11. Asher

    Asher Active Member

    Would writing the Citizens Coinage Advisory Committee (CCAC) / various people at the Mint / anyone else other than elected officials have a better chance of getting noticed? Yes, the Senators/Representatives introduce the legislation, but there are plenty of advisors for the various committees and legislative assistants to do that actual work.

    PS: Can you image having a 2001-D clad half-dollar version of the Buffalo commemorative?. All that was done was the silver BU and silver Proof (and later the 99.99 gold bullion) so someone had enough clout to prevent a half-dollar version of this coin. From PCGS CoinFacts:

    The 2001 Buffalo Dollar coins today, exist thanks to Ben Nighthorse Campbell from Colorado. Campbell was one of forty-four chiefs from the Northern Cheyenne Tribe. It all began in 1995, when Campbell proposed the reintroduction of the buffalo design on a U.S. coin. Campbell’s original proposal was to produce a five-cent coin made out of silver depicting the historical buffalo design. However, his proposal was turned down by congress numerous times.

    A 5-cent silver commemorative!? Has anyone looked at the RoyalMint.com? They make a regular proof set and an ALL SILVER proof set (so no copper or nickel). I'm not sure if they're hobbled like the US where coinage requires legislative laws.
     
    Last edited: Feb 8, 2022
    green18 likes this.
  12. Asher

    Asher Active Member

    YNs = Young Numismatics?
     
    green18 likes this.
  13. green18

    green18 Unknown member Sweet on Commemorative Coins

  14. Conder101

    Conder101 Numismatist

    Agreed, the whole point of having the clad halves was to provide a coin low enough in price that young numismatists could afford them. The first clad halves in 1986 cost $5 with $2.50 of that being the surcharge that went to refurbishing the Statue of Liberty. By 2008 the price had risen to $8 (including $2.50 surcharge) a 60% increase over 22 years. Today, 14 years later, they have risen another 312% over the 2008 price to $33 (Still with just a $2.50 surcharge).

    Now I understand inflation and that costs have gone up, but 300%? That's a 12% per annum compounded interest rate. The clad halves are no longer something for YN's, they are strictly a money maker for the Mint.
     
    onecenter and johnmilton like this.
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