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Friday, June 01, 2007
This Kennedy half won't be spent
Posted by Debbie
I need coffee in the morning. Two big mugs full and I’m good for the day.
We have a coffee machine at work where I can get a passable concoction for 40 cents. I prefer brewing my own at home and bringing it in a thermos, but that takes effort, more effort than I often have in the morning.
So more days than I care to admit I find myself digging through the blue change jar on the kitchen counter as I’m flying out the door. Such was the scenario a few days back when to my surprise, my fingers touched a Kennedy half dollar. Yikes, I haven’t seen one of those in years.
“Who put the half dollar in the change jar?” I shouted to my husband and son. Dead silence. No one could remember getting the half dollar in change.
I continued grilling them until my 17-year-old gave me a look of teen-aged disgust and shouted, “Mom, let it go.”
OK, maybe it was a visiting son from college who threw the coin in the jar. I’d have to follow that path later.
When I mentioned my change jar find to Numismatic News Editor Dave Harper he told me I’d have to find out where it came from and write about it. So far, I explained, it was a mystery.
That evening my husband trumped my find.
“There’s a couple half dollars in the change jar at work,” he said. “Nobody wants them.”
Oh, my gosh. How can that be?
I still feel guilty about cashing in my stash of Kennedy halves years ago when I was a poor newlywed. But, hey, we had bills to pay and formula to buy.
So today, my husband is checking the change jar at work and bringing home all the half dollars he can find. I’m not quite sure what I’ll do with them, but they’re not getting spent. In fact, they just may inspire me to start a collection.
6/1/2007 3:51:09 PM (Eastern Daylight Time, UTC-04:00)
Comments [2]
8/10/2007 8:42:00 PM (Eastern Daylight Time, UTC-04:00)
My son in-laws father got me interested in coins some five years ago after talking about the state quarters, which i had been saving. He gave me a book with many wheat pennies in it. Then we started gathering Kennedy's. I went from bank to bank and we have since compiled several sets to be fairly complete.
S's are hard to get along with 1970 and 1987. About $30,000 worth have been purged.
One of the tellers is collecting 1776 1976's so I take all the unwants to her. What she can't use she returns to the Fed Resv.
There are approx 50 banks in the area and I've been to most of them numerous times. Also picked up some in Cranberry Twp, just off of the Pa Turnpike. 100 miles away. Have gotten a number of silver clads 1965 thru 69 lately. 1970 is clad but only came in San Francisco sets. Also got an S from a tellers drawer, as a single, month or so ago.
So they are out there but it takes leg work. Some of the banks have had very few while others have gotten lots.
check the corrected e mail address SORRY
Bob
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platesAT NOSPAMatlanticbb dot net
8/14/2007 6:23:39 PM (Eastern Daylight Time, UTC-04:00)
Bob,
I'm going to keep looking for Kennedy halves. I still have guilt over spending what I now know were Morgan dollars that my grandfather had given me. I was a newly wed and needed the money. I hope he understands.
Let's keep collecting, and pass on the interest.
Best,
Debbie
Debbie Bradley
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debbie dot bradleyAT NOSPAMfwpubs dot com
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