Imagine Sheldon working with Nurse Ratchet and meeting up with McMurphy in the Cuckoos Nest! [ATTACH]
The coin grading scale that we use everyday may have been created by a common, albeit well educated, thief. He also liked, it appears, to "type"...
vf20 harshy cleaned
66, sunset gold...WoW!
Back in the '50's my father had a couple of coffee cans full of them.
What kind of seeds do you use to "farm" ice?
Love the CC's! Especially the 1880/79 rev of 78 overdate. [ATTACH] [ATTACH]
The chance of finding a 1943 bronze cent is less than getting hit by lightening! BTW, at the cost of being repetitive, this is a Penny. [ATTACH]
Chances are, if "aged" to look that way, they would do it with a more valuable note. These were all from later in the war, the printer (Keatinge...
Yeah @ziggy9 I thought that he was up Boston way. Thanks.
And YTD a $1,250 investment in the DJIA would have become...1,367.50 minus fees.
Might be used as toilet paper in New York!
LMAO!
You are welcome. IMHO, they are worth more as American history conversation pieces, especially the one with Picken's picture.
There is a guy by the name of Pierre Fricke, I understand that he is the quintessential guru of CSA notes...be careful with getting bitten by the...
Are you speaking strictly as an investment?
All of your $10's are T-68...and VERY common...9M + printed...maybe $2 each?? A recent T-68 graded in 63 EPQ (exceptional paper quality) sold for $225
All of the $20's are T-67 and in their condition may be worth $3-5 each. Over 4M printed.
@sakata As with coins, as @mpcusa said it's ALL about condition/grade and rarity...they were distributed in 72 different notes from T-1 to T-72....
Bloody well good!
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