Finished the rest of the zincs from one $50 bag.
Ended up with a 1909 Philly wheat hiding in there.
scyther wrote:HoardCopperByTheTon wrote:Back in the day.. all pennies were copper. We went down the to the bank and hot our rolls or bags of pennies.. then we spread them out on the floor and flipped them over so the backs showed. We sorted for wheats. Those were the days.
Do you know around what time common/late wheats became worth searching for? I've always wondered about that...
Morsecode wrote:scyther wrote:HoardCopperByTheTon wrote:Back in the day.. all pennies were copper. We went down the to the bank and hot our rolls or bags of pennies.. then we spread them out on the floor and flipped them over so the backs showed. We sorted for wheats. Those were the days.
Do you know around what time common/late wheats became worth searching for? I've always wondered about that...
Some time in early 1959![]()
I can recall a friend's father who already had multiple bags of wheats by the mid-sixties, all pulled from circulation, not bought. No doubt there were plenty of others around the country doing the same.
HoardCopperByTheTon wrote:Back in the day.. all pennies were copper. We went down the to the bank and hot our rolls or bags of pennies.. then we spread them out on the floor and flipped them over so the backs showed. We sorted for wheats. Those were the days.
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