Posted on 06/03/2018 11:46:35 AM PDT by ETL
Hold muh Beer. I gotta go see if I got one of these.
WORLD’S FAIR OF MONEY
Philadelphia, PA August 14-18, 2018
Pennsylvania Convention Center at 1101 Arch St, 19107
Halls D and E; (Main Entrance in Hall D)
Come see more than $1 billion of historic rare coins and colorful currency including $100,000 bills and a nickel worth $3 million plus, find out what your old coins and currency may be worth!
It’s all at the World’s Fair of Money®, the biggest, most educational coin show in the country.
Build your collection from the best numismatic inventory anywhere, participate in a live auction, attend lectures and seminars, and view rare historical treasures from the ANA Money Museum and private collections.
SHOW HOURS:
Tuesday 1 p.m. to 6 p.m.; Wednesday-Friday 10 a.m. to 6 p.m.
Saturday 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. (FREE admission on Saturday!)
Last admission is 30 minutes prior to closing.
Admission is $8 for the public; free for ANA members and children under 12. Admission is free on Saturday, August 18.
https://www.money.org/worldsfairofmoney
It was the year they switched from the Barber design to the Buffalo design.
Finest Known 1913 Liberty Head Nickel to Cross the Block in Philadelphia
By CoinWeek - April 25, 2018
Stacks Bowers Galleries is pleased to announce the sale of the finest-known 1913 Liberty Head nickel graded Proof 66 by PCGS and pedigreed to the Louis E. Eliasberg, Sr. Collection. In 1996 this specimen was the first coin in the world to cross the million-dollar threshold.
Today in 2018, Stacks Bowers Galleries is honored to again present the Eliasberg 1913 Liberty Head nickel at public auction. It comes from the family of Dr. William Morton-Smith, an old-time collector whose numismatic interests were spurred by a remarkable discovery.
Dr. Morton-Smith (Bill) hailed from an old-time Boston family whose passion for collecting goes back generations. As in any family, certain heirlooms pass down through the generations and in this particular circumstance, a beautiful antique Colonial desk was inherited by Bill.
As he was combing through the desk discovering its many features, he came across a compartment that housed a coin collection consisting of colonial coins, half cents, large cents, a complete set of Proof Liberty Head nickels and much more. These had once belonged to his great grandfather. Bill was amazed that the coins had been in the desk all this time. He determined to learn all he could about them and add to the collection. He spent decades adding important rarities to this prized cabinet started generations before.
The Morton-Smith family has chosen Stacks Bowers Galleries to once again showcase a legendary rarity from their holdings. It will be a highlight in the firms August 2018 Official Auction of the ANA Worlds Fair of Money in Philadelphia. This is not the first time Stacks Bowers Galleries has worked with the family; previously they were selected to bring to market Bills 1804 dollar, pedigreed to the Berg and Garrett collections, and his 1794 dollar, the Lord St. Oswald/Norweb specimen.
The Dr. William Morton-Smith/Eliasberg 1913 Liberty Head nickel will be on display at the Stacks Bowers Galleries table at the upcoming Central States Numismatic Convention April 25-28 in Schaumburg, Illinois; the Long Beach Convention, June 14-16; the Whitman Coin Expo in Baltimore. June 21-24; and other major shows between now and August. Private viewings are also available by appointment. To schedule a viewing please contact company president, Brian Kendrella at 800-458-4646.
The sale will take place at the Pennsylvania Convention Center, on the evening of Wednesday, August 15. Bidders can participate in person, or by Internet, mail, or telephone (by previous arrangement). For more information call 800-458-4646 or visit StacksBowers.com.
I used to have an 1883 nickel. I forgot what I did with it. Found it in a field, so it’s hardly mint condition.
Thanks! I sold a bunch of 50’s & 60’s Proof Sets & some Silver Eagle Proofs. Just had way too many...
Occasionally well veer into a discussion of numismatics in the popular media such as books, movies and television shows. Gerald Tebben published an article February 19, 2016 in Coin World about a funny 1961 episode of The Andy Griffith Show. -Editor
A running gag involving a fictional mint error plays a major part in the Mayberry on Record episode (season 1, episode 19) of The Andy Griffith Show and caused perhaps a few of the more gullible among us to check our change for a certain supposedly misstruck Indian Head 5-cent piece in the early 1960s.
At the beginning of the episode, Deputy Barney Fife (Don Knotts) says hes looking for an investment that zooms overnight.
It happens, you know, he says, plopping himself down on top of a table. Oil stocks and uranium.
Sheriff Andy Taylor (Andy Griffith) cautions, You better watch this investing business. The woods are full of con men. Youd be just ripe for the plucking, too.
Barney, calling himself old eagle-eye, says thats not likely, providing an intro for the joke that falsely foreshadows the drama to come.
Andy, sitting at his desk, says, Well now, Ill tell you. If youre really considering investing, why dont you try coin collecting?
Coin collecting for investing? Barney asks.
Andy replies, Well sure, its a good hobby, and you cant never tell when youll come across a rare old coin that might bring you a whole lot of money.
A coin? Cut it out, Barney says.
Andy shows Barney wrong-way Buffalo nickel Well sure. Look here. Look right here, Andy says opening his desk drawer and taking out a coin. See that nickel right there. Now I paid $10 for that nickel. A month later a fellow offered me 50 for it. It wouldnt surprise me a bit if I was to advertise Id get, oh, a couple hundred dollars.
For a nickel. How come, Barney asks.
Andy replies, Well, they made a mistake at the mint. Look right here. See that buffalo right there?
Yeah, Barney affirms.
Facing the wrong way, Andy explains.
Facing the wrong way? Barney questions as he tries to grab coin.
Andy pulls it away, saying, And that makes it valuable. Yeah, I dont suspect theres more than two or three in the whole country.
Andy tells Barney the coin keeps increasing in value because there are so few of them.
Hooked, Barney offers to buy it. I couldnt give you no 200, but might go 50 75.
They agree on $75 and shake hands. Andy hands the coin to Barney.
No wrong-way Buffalo nickels are known, but Indian Head 5-cent piece errors are highly collectible. In 2010, a 1913 Bison on Plain 5-cent coin struck on a dime planchet sold for $46,000 at auction.
https://nnp.wustl.edu/library/periodical/511850The episode can be viewed online.
To watch the episode on YouTube, see:
...Sorry, just realized that last piece I posted regarding an AG episode didn’t complete the story.
Here’s a link to the full episode on YouTube...
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-EgUjxBFe-0
When Barney, who is standing face to face with Andy who is seated at his desk, takes out a nickle from his pocket to compare it to the "wrong way buffalo" nickle Andy is holding, Andy asks him, 'which way is your buffalo facing'? Barney answers, 'that way' (pointing to his left). Andy then informs him that the buffalo on the nickle he is holding is facing the other way. Barney comes around the desk to examine the 'rare' coin for himself, and sees that Andy is telling him the truth. Then he takes out his coin again and realizes Andy was conning him! The buffalos on BOTH coins are facing the same way.
Facing the wrong way, Andy explains.
Facing the wrong way? Barney questions as he tries to grab coin.
Andy pulls it away, saying, And that makes it valuable. Yeah, I dont suspect theres more than two or three in the whole country.
Andy tells Barney the coin keeps increasing in value because there are so few of them.
Hooked, Barney offers to buy it. I couldnt give you no 200, but might go 50 75.
They agree on $75 and shake hands. Andy hands the coin to Barney.
So they escaped the inheritance tax on a million dollar rare nickel?
If I remember my history, earlier the Gov’t produced a similar five cent coin without the word “cents” on it.
An enterprising young man had lots of them gold plated, headed west and went into a saloon pointed to a sign for a five cent beer, drank it, handed the bartender a gold plated nickle, and received $4.95 back.
He later got caught, his defense was he was deaf and mute and merely pointed at the 5 cent beer sign, and it was not his fault the bartender took his nickle gave him back $4.95.
You have to wonder what they were thinking when they switched from Liberty to a buffalo. That was one weird decision.
How soon before we have Karl Marx coins?
How soon before we have Karl Marx coins?
Im betting if the Rats get back in power we will see Obama on a coin.
How bad would that be?
The reverse of the “Mercury” dime had a bundle of sticks tied together with an axe head sticking out of the bundle.
https://www.govmint.com/coin-authority/post/a-fascist-u-s-dime/
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