coin collecting merit badge workshop

51
Coin Collecting Merit Badge Workshop By : Jim Bevill Texas Numismatic Association 1’st Vice President Coin Collecting Merit Badge Counselor SHAC / Rising Star District

Upload: kylan-hartman

Post on 01-Jan-2016

76 views

Category:

Documents


3 download

DESCRIPTION

Coin Collecting Merit Badge Workshop. By : Jim Bevill Texas Numismatic Association 1’st Vice President Coin Collecting Merit Badge Counselor SHAC / Rising Star District. Merit Badge Requirements. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

TRANSCRIPT

Page 1: Coin Collecting Merit Badge Workshop

Coin Collecting Merit Badge Workshop

By : Jim Bevill

Texas Numismatic Association

1’st Vice President

• Coin Collecting Merit Badge Counselor

SHAC / Rising Star District

Page 2: Coin Collecting Merit Badge Workshop

Merit Badge Requirements

• 1) Understand how coins are made,

and where the active U.S. Mints

are located.

Page 3: Coin Collecting Merit Badge Workshop

This mint opened its doors in 1792

Page 4: Coin Collecting Merit Badge Workshop

The “Mile High” Mint(as it looked on opening day in 1906)

Page 5: Coin Collecting Merit Badge Workshop

This mint survived the 1906 earthquake and fire !

Page 6: Coin Collecting Merit Badge Workshop

“The Granite Lady”

Page 7: Coin Collecting Merit Badge Workshop

This mint strikes only gold, silver and platinum bullion coins

!

Page 8: Coin Collecting Merit Badge Workshop

#2 Explain these Collecting Terms

• A) Obverse

• B) Reverse

• C) Reeding

• D) Clad

• E) Type Set

• F) Date Set

Page 9: Coin Collecting Merit Badge Workshop

Obverse = Heads !

Page 10: Coin Collecting Merit Badge Workshop

Reverse = Tails

Page 11: Coin Collecting Merit Badge Workshop

Many coins have a reeded edge !

Page 12: Coin Collecting Merit Badge Workshop

Clad coins, are made of fused metal, not gold or silver.

Page 13: Coin Collecting Merit Badge Workshop

Type Set

Page 14: Coin Collecting Merit Badge Workshop

Date Sets – 2 Types

• All varieties and mintmarks of a particular date .

- or -

• A series of coins

collected in date order, without regard

to mintmarks.

Page 15: Coin Collecting Merit Badge Workshop

#3 Coin Grading

• Sheldon Grading Scale (see handout)

• Grades range from Poor, Good, Fine, Extra Fine, Almost Uncirculated, and Uncirculated on a scale of 1 – 70 ! A coin graded 70 is perfect !

• Very Important ! Very Subjective !

• The higher the grade, the more expensive the coin !

Page 16: Coin Collecting Merit Badge Workshop

Grading U.S. Mercury Dimes

AG Good Fine

Page 17: Coin Collecting Merit Badge Workshop

Mercury Dime Grading

Very Fine Extremely Fine Uncirculated

Page 18: Coin Collecting Merit Badge Workshop

Proof Coins

• A specially made coin distinguished by sharpness of detail and a brilliant mirrorlike surface.

• It is a method of manufacture, double struck with great care on polished dies.

• Most proof coins are in perfect, mint state condition, though many older proofs were once

in circulation.

Page 19: Coin Collecting Merit Badge Workshop
Page 20: Coin Collecting Merit Badge Workshop
Page 21: Coin Collecting Merit Badge Workshop
Page 22: Coin Collecting Merit Badge Workshop
Page 23: Coin Collecting Merit Badge Workshop

Is this 1860 Seated Liberty Dollar a proof coin ?

Page 24: Coin Collecting Merit Badge Workshop

Encapsulated or “Slabbed” Coins

• Third party guarantee of authenticity.

• Independent grading opinion.

• Protected in sealed plastic holders.

Page 25: Coin Collecting Merit Badge Workshop

Even the best grading services make mistakes !

Page 26: Coin Collecting Merit Badge Workshop

#4 Know at least three different ways to store your coin collection ?

Page 27: Coin Collecting Merit Badge Workshop

Know your paper money !

Page 28: Coin Collecting Merit Badge Workshop

Federal Reserve Notes• The serial number on US paper currency is applied separately from the portraits and symbols that

characterize the bill. Printed in bright green ink when the uncut bills arrive at each Reserve Bank, this number represents the bill's unique identity.

• A serial number consists of two prefix letters, eight numerals, and a one-letter suffix:

• The first letter of the prefix denotes the currency series.

• The second letter of the prefix indicates the Federal Reserve Bank at which the bill was produced.

• The eight digits represent the bill's sequential order within its group. The one-letter suffix is a further sequential counter within each Reserve Bank's bills in a series.

• The suffix letter advances when the 8-digit number reaches 99999999 (for example, xx99999999B is followed by xx00000001C). The entire alphabet is used for this process except for the letter O.

• Bills with a star in the place of their suffix letter are replacements for bills that did not meet federal standards after the printing process and are subsequently destroyed.

• Bills produced before 1996 were printed with the seal of their particular Reserve Bank; new bills feature a universal Federal Reserve Seal.

Page 29: Coin Collecting Merit Badge Workshop

#5 Identify the people on the$1, $2, $5, $10, $20, $50, $100

…also…Explain “legal tender”

Describe the role of the Federal

Reserve System plays in the distribution

of money.

Page 30: Coin Collecting Merit Badge Workshop

What’s wrong with this $1 bill ?

Page 31: Coin Collecting Merit Badge Workshop

This $2 bill commemorates theAmerican Bicentennial !

Page 32: Coin Collecting Merit Badge Workshop

What is different about this $5 bill ?

Page 33: Coin Collecting Merit Badge Workshop

Why does this bill say “Hawaii” ?

Page 34: Coin Collecting Merit Badge Workshop

Is something missing on this $20 ?

Page 35: Coin Collecting Merit Badge Workshop

• Some collectors

pay big bucks for

printing errors on

currency !

It can pay you to pay

attention to the details

on paper money that

is in circulation !

Page 36: Coin Collecting Merit Badge Workshop
Page 37: Coin Collecting Merit Badge Workshop
Page 38: Coin Collecting Merit Badge Workshop
Page 39: Coin Collecting Merit Badge Workshop
Page 40: Coin Collecting Merit Badge Workshop
Page 41: Coin Collecting Merit Badge Workshop

$100,000 in Cash !

Page 42: Coin Collecting Merit Badge Workshop

U.S. Federal Reserve System

Page 43: Coin Collecting Merit Badge Workshop

Federal Reserve is the Banker’s Bank !

Page 44: Coin Collecting Merit Badge Workshop

#6 Numismatic Reference

a) Demonstrate how to use a U.S or a world coin reference catalog.

b) Read a numismatic

magazine or a

newspaper and

tell your counselor

what you have

learned.

Page 45: Coin Collecting Merit Badge Workshop

“The Red Book”(The most widely accepted

reference on United States Coins)

Page 46: Coin Collecting Merit Badge Workshop

#7 State Quarters

1) Describe the 1999- 2008 State Quarters Program

2) Collect and show

5 different examples

Page 47: Coin Collecting Merit Badge Workshop

What kind of horse is being ridden on this 1999 Delaware quarter ?

Page 48: Coin Collecting Merit Badge Workshop

#8 Collect from circulation a set of currently circulating U.S. Coins

• 1) Include one coin of each denomination.

• 2) For each coin, locate the mint marks,

if any, and the designers initials.

Page 49: Coin Collecting Merit Badge Workshop

#9 Collect and identify

• 1) 50 foreign coins from at least 10 countries. - or –

• 2) 20 bank notes from at least 5 different countries. – or –

3) 15 different tokens or medals. – or – 4) Collect a date set of a single type since the

year of your birth.

Page 50: Coin Collecting Merit Badge Workshop

#10 Do one of the following…• A) Tour a U.S. Mint, BEP, or Federal Reserve

bank and describe what you learned.

- or -• B) Attend a Coin Show or Coin club meeting, or

view the mint’s website or a dealer’s website and describe what you’ve learned.

- or -• C) Give a talk about coin collecting to your troop

or at school.

- or -• D) Do drawings of five Colonial-era U.S. Coins.

Page 51: Coin Collecting Merit Badge Workshop

The Texas Numismatic Association wishes you well on your coin

collecting merit badge !

www.TNA.org