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 Tuesday, September 25, 2007
Wheaties® – The Breakfast of Champions’ Coins
Posted by colin

Angola1-bc.jpgWell, not the wheaties on the reverse of our older Lincoln pennies but a promotion that Wheaties® did some time in the 1950s.

The various coins were wrapped in cellophane, and the one side had a rather concise listing of the country’s capital, area, population, resources, industries, agriculture, monetary units and the denomination of the coin inside. This wrapper proved to be very safe as most all of these coins appear to be BU, and the Angola pair catalog at $10 and $25 respectively in the current edition of the Standard Catalog of World Coins – 20th Century.

Angola1-a.jpgI have no idea of how many different coins made up a complete series, but with only my dad and myself eating Wheaties® as much we could, we didn’t get far until the promotion ended. As most dates are under the printed side, I’ll list the dates I can observe.

Angola – 10 Centavos 1948, 20 Centavos 1948
Ceylon – 2 Cents 1951, 5 Cents, 10 Cents 1951
France – 1 Franc
Haiti – 5 Centimes
St. Pierre & Miquelon – 1 Franc 1948
Switzerland – 1 Centime
Tunisia – 1 Franc 1945 (circulated)
Turkey – 1 Kurus, 2-1/2 Kurus


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The following is an e-mail received in response to this entry:

Hi Colin,
I was at a local coin show yesterday and a dealer had a large collection of sealed wheaties coins, so I made a list of what he had.

Angola 10 centavos KM-70 1949, 20 centavos KM-71 1948
Austria 2 groschen KM-2876 1952
Belgium 20 centimes KM-146 1953
Bolivia 1 boliviano KM-184 1951-H
Ceylon 2 cents KM-119 1951, 5 cents KM-113.2 1944, 10 cents K-121 1951
Cyprus 1/2 piastre KM-29 1949
Denmark 10 ore KM-841.1 1954
Ecuador 10 centavos KM-76b 1946
Finland 1 markka KM-36a 1954
Germany 1 pfennig KM-105 1950
Haiti 5 centimes KM-59 1953
Honduras 1 centavo KM-77.2 1954
Iceland 1 eyrir KM-8 1953
India 1 pice KM-1.3 1951 (B)
Italy 5 lire (KM-92 1954)
Luxembourg 25 centimes KM-45 1947
Norway 1 ore KM-398 1954
Pakistan 1 pice KM-1 1948
Portugal 10 centavos KM-583 1953
St. Pierre 1 franc KM-1 1948
South Africa 1 farthing KM-44 1953
Switzerland 1 rappen KM-46 1952
Turkey 1 kurus KM-881 1949, 2 1/2 kurus KM-885 1948

Best wishes,
Joseph Zaffern


9/25/2007 10:50:21 AM (Eastern Daylight Time, UTC-04:00)  #  Comments [0]
 Wednesday, September 05, 2007
eBay Encounters of Another Kind
Posted by colin

Chinese-b.jpgeBay offerings are just loaded with fakes and fantasies of Chinese coins as usual I would have to say. Most all rarities including common types of Chinese Imperial through Republican era crowns and minors up through 1949 dates can be had.

Of course copies of our first issue of USA dollars have always been very popular with the tourist shops in Hong Kong for decades. Once while I was in Hong Kong, I looked at an early USA dollar and Ms. Liberty had a hairdo that looked more like spaghetti or a cotton mop head.

Recently I noticed a rather unusual eBay lot of encapsulated crowns, and I ended up being thChinese-d.jpge "lucky" bidder. The metal appears to be silver, but I'm sure it isn't. The construction appears to be two-piece, but only a hacksaw would prove whether they are or not.

The first example has a dateless Morgan Dollar with Ms. Liberty's head surrounded by a ring of 21 stars. The English legend on the outer ring is a bit humerous having a few errors in it, but should read: "COIN SILVER SAMPLE" - "CIRCULATION NO". Remember, the older Chinese is read from right to left. This is replaced by Chinese characters on the reverse.

The second example has an encapsulated Seated Liberty Dollar dated 1845. Note the irregular alignment of the numerals with the "5" a bit larger than the "184".

Measuring 50 mm in diameter and having nicely reeded edges, I think if nothing else a few large stacks of these certainly would make excellent poker chips, even though they do not have a "ring" like silver coins do.

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9/5/2007 2:51:18 PM (Eastern Daylight Time, UTC-04:00)  #  Comments [0]
Mysterious Coins of Liberia
Posted by colin

369517bc.jpgThe greatest difficulty encountered in trying to provide the most complete listings in the 20th and 21st century editions of The Standard Catalog of World Coins is in fact capturing data and illustrations of certain world coins that have had their entire mintage handled by various firms or promoters through non-numismatic channels.

My very good friend Richard Nelson called me recently and asked why we haven't listed the 2000 dated JFK memorial $500 coin from Liberia as yet? Well, I replied that we haven't seen or heard of such a coin. Nelson then added that it was struck by the American National Mint exclusively for Sunset West International, which are both unknown to us. So I asked another favor for him to send one of the two pieces he happened to have in his office along for our examination.

When it arrived, I opened the rather prestigious wooden case to find a one troy pound proof coin struck in 0.999 fine silver with an additional 1/2 ounce of 0.999 fine gold centered inlay with conjoined heads of JFK and his son, John Jr. Measuring a whopping 89 mm with reeded edge, I was very impressed. The upper reverse legend repeats JFK's most famous statement.

369517fc.jpgNelson added the fact that although 300 pieces were struck the promoters did not sell the entire mintage and there are a few pieces still available for the numismatic community. For further information on availability Nelson can be reached at 818-609-7666.

This is just one good example of just how many worldwide dealers and collectors out there that are willing to take the time to contact us, lend us or send us 300 dpi scans of their unlisted or not illustrated coins to enhance our publications. This is what makes a great worldwide numismatic community. It is called "sharing information," and this is what makes this great hobby grow.




9/5/2007 10:21:03 AM (Eastern Daylight Time, UTC-04:00)  #  Comments [0]