How much would a perfect uncirculated 70+ Sacagawea 2000 coin be?

Discussion in 'Coin Chat' started by Howard Ryan, May 4, 2022.

  1. PamR

    PamR You Never Know! Supporter

    Yes, moving from Tennessee back to Louisiana in 2016. In our new home we built from TN just two weeks. Furniture etc delivered two days before the 2016 flood. Let’s just say water with other things in it is destructive. I actually felt guilt for many as we were taken out by boat, watching others with no insurance being it was an area not required flood insurance. We had gotten flood insurance 30 days before closing on house. Lost a bunch and I’m thankful that we had the flash flood part of it but others had water for days and as you say, water is a cruel part of Mother Nature at times.

    and I get it I brought that way off topic but seeing what water did to my things not to “purrty”.
     
    Last edited: May 11, 2022
    Pickin and Grinin likes this.
  2. Avatar

    Guest User Guest



    to hide this ad.
  3. PamR

    PamR You Never Know! Supporter

    Hey mine were found through dad’s and hubby brought a few otherwise I would not buy any. I first posted one when I joined and I said Gold etc. Can you image the feedback? Lol! :yawn:o_O:arghh::smuggrin: But I recovered.
     
  4. Phil's Coins

    Phil's Coins Well-Known Member

    I have a set of Sac's that are MS69 & 70, only one worth anything and it is not worth that much is the near date. My set it with a friend that goes to numerous coin shows and he is going to offer it for sale this coming weekend. Most of them were purchased from estate sales and I really do not have that much invested in the set so whatever it sells for will be fine with me.
    Semper Fi
    Phil
     
    capthank and PamR like this.
  5. capthank

    capthank Well-Known Member

    Are you talking Sac's or SBA's?
     
  6. Jim Dale

    Jim Dale Well-Known Member

    I think my father saved about any type of U.S. coin that had been issued, however, it is evident that he did not have a goal of any complete sets. If he found a coin that he liked, he would throw it in a jar, separating them by the type of coins. When he died, my mother put them into a very drinking large water jar.
     
    PamR likes this.
  7. PamR

    PamR You Never Know! Supporter

    Exactly what my dad did. Now my mom collected the state quarters and ATB quarters for my son every year or every time one was minted. It’s fun going through dad’s. You are right it’s a little of this and that but interesting.
     
    Cheech9712 likes this.
  8. John Skelton

    John Skelton Morgan man!

    Okay, you all convinced me. I'm dumping my 8oz. glass of water right now! Guess I need to go back to the hard stuff.
     
    -jeffB likes this.
  9. whopper64

    whopper64 Well-Known Member

    Because the Sacagawea/Native American coin is clad, and very common, really the only value is in the "eyes of the beholder". Some of the varieties are worth something, but the PR70's are overrated as far as value. However, if one is collecting for historical purposes, a very nice coin, especially since the U.S. Mint changes the reverse every year (since 2009). Thought they would change the reverse in 2014 for the Kennedy half, but they didn't.
     
    Cheech9712 likes this.
Draft saved Draft deleted

Share This Page