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RonnieR131

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Posts posted by RonnieR131

  1.  I use old polished/cleaned coins to commemorate the birth of relatives that I have pictures and/or funeral cards of. I've put the coins next to their pictures to help give perspective to me and whoever inherits what I've put together. I'm still looking for an inexpensive 1832 coin.. My Great great uncle Joseph born in 1832 and died in 1914 is currently coinless. I have his 'In Loving Memory Of' funeral card and a picture of him in his military Union uniform taken during the Civil War. Just throwing that idea out there that makes buying a polished coin worthwhile at a reasonable price. It at least makes the coins worth more than melt. Just saying........

  2.  QA, that's the point. I'll be 70 in a few weeks. I don't like 'look at me' large homes, don't want acreage anymore, don't want a sports car to get traffic tickets with or worse, flip it upside down at 170 mph. No more horses to feed and take to the vet, no more traveling to other continents, on and on. I would enjoy watching others be thrilled, make mistakes, give to others in need that they know, and have money woes and unseen dilemmas that it would bring. I can't buy health and longevity, or friendship or love. I just don't need the money at this point like others may at my age, I will admit, I would like to make an offer they couldn't refuse on the 1870S three dollar Indian Princess coin, $100,000,000, with the agreement that I have it in my collection, in my registry set, and then donate it back to them for display where it was for the public to view. There are many other more worthwhile pieces for sure, but that coin would be my personal 'holy grail'. When I said give to friends, I meant members on this chat board as well. I'd like to help you upgrade your Roosters, put a smile on your face. That would make me happy. That is, unless you wouldn't want me to 'toss' any your way. 

  3.  I was wondering if what I am seeing is correct. I clicked on the NGC Coin Explorer, 1793 Liberty Cap 1 cent MS, and noticed that at an auction, HA lot #2014 1793 Liberty Cap graded AU55 on 02/14/08 sold for $632,500. On 11/07/03, HA lot #9464 a 1793 Liberty Cap graded AU58, a grade higher, sold for $103.50. Could it be that someone was really that lucky to submit the winning bid at $103.50? More than likely, I'm misreading the charts, or a misprint. Could someone explain, I seem to overlook the obvious more frequently the last few years.

  4.  Thank you very much Mr. Burdette for all the time you spend researching our numismatic past and cherry picking interesting articles for us to read and learn from them. I agree with Mr. Lange, a lot of useful information in a very compact format. That time period of the last half century of the 1800 makes me fantasize of what daily commerce on a small scale was like. An example would be a nine year old getting four 3 cent coins for his or her birthday, and them taking a long time to decide how to make it stretch at the local candy store. They don't want to spend it all in one place, so they get 7 or 8 cents worth of candy and get Indian head pennies as change. What a wonderful day!