I was 7 years old and 50 cents would buy me 60 pieces of one cent candy. It would also buy my day about a gallon and a quarter of gasoline. Silver...
With the wear showing on the obverse and the carbon spots I 'm more at a XF-45 but I tend to grade my coins on the low side.
I thought that added a lot to this token. It's something you just don't see very much of, if at all.
For the price you paid you did very well. Two nice radar notes, crisp and mark free. A nice three cent Nickel and a silver dime to round it all...
Slightly MAD and worn but that's all
Those are sure pretty but I think every one of them is nothing but AT.
Here's a token from 1961 celebrating the 325th anniversary of Rhode Island. It's value was placed at $.50 in its year of issue, 1961. Not bad...
One dollar
Ten dollars worth.
Definitely not a coin.
You just beat me to it. You remembered her.
Let us not forget Dale Evans.
Looks like a lot of damage to me.
My first and only thought is: That's a planchet flaw.
You know you're a coin collector if you look at coins and hear one of them calling your name.
Roy Rogers, remember him? Obv. ROY ROGERS RIDERS LUCK PIECE Rev. GOOD LUCK FOREVER with his horse Trigger in a horseshoe. This is from the late...
Definitely Bicentennial Quarters
A great lamination error on an older coin. Sweet!!
Congrats on completing the set. Close the album and tuck it away.
Definitely damaged
Separate names with a comma.