Commemorative Coins 1927 Charles Linbergh flight to Paris 1928 1st East to West Transatlantic Flight 1935 pony express/changing ponies have 2 of these 1933 Chicago Exposition Sorry no pics yet for I have a seller offering these. Thanks for your input.
Hi Rounded! Do you know who produced them? Are the dates when they were struck? What metals are they struck in? This would help me decide if it was me buying them.
That's all I needed to know. I have a 2002 Red Book (given to me for now) and there were not in there. So that tells me if it's not in the book there not U.S. Coins? Thanks for the info and confirmation.
1) They are not coins. 2) they are commemorative tokens, medals, or so-called $'s. 3) If you like them, buy them.
no, it simply means that they are not coins. There are items issued by the US Mint that are medals, and such that are not listed.
rounded, 0.999 silver is bullion grade silver. Silver coins and (most?) medals are 90% silver (0.900 silver).
Correct me if I am wrong, but the Pony Express Diamond Jubilee is struck in German Silver (a cheap white metal) and not Silver. I don't know about the others though.