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Saor Alba

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Posts posted by Saor Alba

  1. That's correct, and this note in particular is quite late with the Speelman-White signature combo and dated 1922.

     

     

    JT, at one point in a hoard acquisition I had a Series 1902 with the issue date in late 1926 or 1927 - I think it was from Battle Creek or Grand Rapids Michigan - but it didn't otherwise fit any themes in my collection and I did sell it to another collector. Just going on what I have seen it was fairly unusual for a bank to get a charter in the late 1920's. It wasn't so unusual in the early 1930's, but most of those were reorganisational charters for banks that were sequestered after the financial meltdowns then. The Series 1902 and 1902-1908 Nationals were the last notes that were handsigned in the USA, at least in small institutions. Other banks issuing more used rubber stamp signatures, and in the case of the largest banks they had printed signatures. It really is a fascinating area to collect and research.

  2. Yes, as Jeff is pointing out the charter number being 64 denotes the bank as an original charter bank from the Civil War era - curiously there were not a whole lot of banks that survived deep into the 20th century with their original charter number. Any sort of reorganisation etc would result in a new charter number.

  3. Deadpoint, there are some of us that collect Nationals by the bank, the type, the signatures, the dates issued etc. For me I collect specifically three locations in the USA. I have most of the known notes from a small Missouri city.

     

    Here is my most recent acquisition from the FUN Auction the other night:

     

    obslouisiana51866dtl1.jpg

     

    louisiana51866tn.jpg

     

    The post Civil War era state, municipal and especially commercially issued notes are becoming quite a little specialist pursuit of mine lately. I have numerous examples from the South now, and one very rare and elusive one from deep in the North.

  4. I can only answer for later on, but 3 and 5 rubles were not a lot of money when the economy was in transition while I was there. It was sort of crazy, food was a fixed price - inexpensive and very affordable, but you had to be able to find it and in quantity. Other things started being priced at market prices like clothing etc, so then became very very expensive. Very soon most people were wiped out of their meager savings - and then after the USSR and new currencies were wiped out again so that people in the know don't keep their money local or in rubles or whatever currency now. I remember leaving in August 1991 and turning in the ruble notes I had, and guess what - they would not convert them to hard currency or something I was thinking I might get - only into those 5 ruble coins. At the time I didn't care for them, but now I am glad I have whole bunch of the "Sobor" series coins.

  5. Back in the day, collecting was not really considered good social behaviour :evilbanana: but a lot of people did it and keep quite about it. I was collecting the Tsarist coins, but they were hard to find and not too good to show off that you had them.

     

    In the USA there are certain areas of collecting that well, you don't talk about much either. :shock:

  6. A bumper haul:

     

    A game token "No Cash Value"

     

    Cyprus 50 mils 1955

     

    Ghana 50 Pesewas 2007

     

    Kuwait 10 fils 1995

     

    Mexico 50 Pesos 1987 - 2 examples

     

    Spain 25 Pesetas 1975 (79)

     

    Switzerland 20 Rappen 2008

     

    Switzerland 1/2 Frank 1969

     

    Turkey 25 Kurus 1960

     

    These are from one of my bank's coin machines, they save the rejects for me from commercial deposits.

  7. Sort of circulation find, when I went into my one bank yesterday to drop off my teller's hockey tickets(gift for being so good about ordering coin boxes) she had a 1946 Roosie waiting for me. She had gotten it in a deposit, just seeing the edge when she put it in her tray. She thought it was Canadian and she was going to take it out and put it into the drawer - they send the Canadian stuff away. So she picked it up and cast it into the drawer and noticed FDR, whoops, he is not a Canadian.

     

    Gosh, it pays to have good relationships with your bank's tellers. Especially those vault tellers.

  8. I search $500-$800 a week lately. Been doing good on silvers, but Buffalos were getting scarcer than hen's teeth until I found a dateless this morning. But the best find of all was the FR-2 1890 Liberty. Just the outline of the Liberty and the date on the coin but a cool 122 year old find. Also found a Swiss 20 Rappen from 2008 in one of the rolls.

  9. So far save one example, I have been able to resist, but I could bend if the Zofingen example were to be offered. I do like the Swiss misses.

     

    As for Nazi stuff in Switzerland, it never really caught on there. It did catch on a bit more in Austria - primarily because though they were the minority they were also the loudmouths.

     

    I don't remember seeing any Nazi propaganda or graffiti anywhere in W. Europe. But you do see it from time to time in Ukraine, which is unbelievable.

  10. I often wonder if my 17 yr old daughter has some mystical powers over money. A few weeks ago and higher up in this thread she got a 1929-S cent. Today while buying up more clothes she got a 1929 cent. Up to a few years ago she collected, now she just wants the reward from me for her finds.

  11. Yesterday -

     

    2 Mexican 50 Pesos coins

    1 Mexican 500 Peso coin

    4 Canadian Dimes

    1 Canadian Quarter

    1 USA'ian Quarter

    1 USA'ian Dime

    1 E. Caribbean States 25 Cents

    1 Singapore 10 cents

    1 Belizean 5 cent coin dated 2003.

     

    The last coin for me was the coolest, it has QEII on it, but the same portrait has been used since back in the British Honduras days - a portrait from the 1950's - seemingly HRH doesn't age on Belizean coins. :hysterical:

  12. I have a complete set of those which were sold by a stamp and coin company after the war, purporting to be notes for a planned invasion of the United States. Interesting designs though!

     

    Indeed that was how they sold them, but in reality the dollar denominated notes were for the Malaysian theatre, and Singapore. Where they did use their own dollar.

  13. This was sort of a crazy find, a dime that had been rotated in a dryer drum for several months and had upset rims, and three Jordanian coins - I could only identify them from the picture of King Hussein, they are dated 1991(2) and 1994. After looking at them more closely I can identify them as 5 Qirsh coins - they are larger than a quarter and worth about 8 cents each. First time I have ever seen coins from Jordan, and I wonder how they got here.

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