I prefer NGC for my gold. They seem to grade higher there which is a benefit for the seller but for the buyer? not so much.
Yes. I have them all but the 1974 Philadelphia aluminum cent.
That one looks to have lost weight due to corrosion, wear or being soaked in acid. A week or two in ordinary Coca-Cola will do that.
Not having perused the previous answer, I wouldn't buy one without it being certified by one of the top grading companies. There are many, many...
$7500 for a '56 Flying Eagle. For myself. The most expensive I have SOLD was an 1893 S Morgan dollar for $21,500. There have been quite a few a...
I she adopting????
The thin copper layer has rubbed away showing the zinc core. Post minting damage.
Go to a coin show or your LCH. Look at a zillion coins. The more the better. Buy and read books.
VF20 Barely
I sell mine for 4¢ each postpaid in lots of 7,500. Lesser amounts +cheap postage.
Virtually ANY coindealer. I myself only have about 30,000 sitting on the floor waiting for a buyer because I shipped my entire stock out at once...
We were gearing up for WWII in 1940 though. Germany was rolling through Europe and Franklin knew it was just a matter of time......
For 4¢ each I am positive you could buy all the wheat cents your house could support.
Looks like it spent a while underground. Environmental damage.
Yes. "Use it up, wear it out, make it do or do without!" Some dates and mints have large premiums for well struck coins.
You didn't hurt it any. It's been well handled previously. I see one dealer on the teletype buying them at $27.00
Is the mintmark punched upside down? Looks normal to me but I don't see anything that would add value to the coin.
Normal deterioration. Perhaps you are looking a little too hard with the microscope? For me, unless I can see something plainly with the naked...
Pictures show nothing out of the ordinary for a normal cent.
BU Quarter dollar. BU = Beat-Up.
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