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coins and basic arithmetic, was bus partitions
And it had nothing to do with the particular coins being offered -- it
would have worked just as well with Statehood Quarters or Lewis & Clark Nickels or any ordinary coins. Sigh. *If you'd ever actually looked at the Mint's web site, you'd know that the bags of dollar coins are the only thing they sold there at face value. *You could (and can) buy a bag of 100 quarters, but not for $25. ... The scam WOULD HAVE WORKED JUST AS WELL with any coins that were offered the way the commemorative dollars were offered. Hmmn. Is there some way I could write "bags of dollar coins are the only thing they sold there at face value" that would be easier to understand? R's, John |
coinage, was bus partitions
On Jan 1, 5:24*pm, "Martin Rich" wrote:
"Peter T. Daniels" wrote in ... In 1965, when silver coins were replaced by clad coins, the old ones weren't recalled or demonetized or anything; the ones that weren't in the collectors pool were simply retired as they were deposited in banks, presumably to eventually be melted down for whatever else silver was used for. As mentioned elsewhere in the thread, when the UK went decimal in 1971 the former one shilling and two shilling coins remained unchanged, apart from the details of the design, but became 5p and 10p coins. *So a lot of coins with 'one shilling' or 'two shilling' inscriptions remained in circulation until the new, smaller, 5p and 10p coins were introduced in the early 1990s. But in later years the oldest shilling or two shilling coins in widespread circulation were from 1947, because the older coins had a higher silver content and thus would have significant scrap value Well, we haven't had a currency change since the Jefferson administration (1801-1809), when decimal currency replaced pounds and thalers and pesos. |
coins and basic arithmetic, was bus partitions
On Jan 1, 10:02*pm, John Levine wrote:
And it had nothing to do with the particular coins being offered -- it would have worked just as well with Statehood Quarters or Lewis & Clark Nickels or any ordinary coins. Sigh. *If you'd ever actually looked at the Mint's web site, you'd know that the bags of dollar coins are the only thing they sold there at face value. *You could (and can) buy a bag of 100 quarters, but not for $25. ... The scam WOULD HAVE WORKED JUST AS WELL with any coins that were offered the way the commemorative dollars were offered. Hmmn. *Is there some way I could write "bags of dollar coins are the only thing they sold there at face value" that would be easier to understand? You really don't understand counterfactuals? That means, You really don't understand "what if"s? and fiction? and imagination? |
coinage, was bus partitions
Phil Kane wrote:
" wrote: I don't quite understand how silver certificates worked. What I've heard, you could take one to a bank and redeem it for silver. But how would that silver actually be distributed? I tried that once. I got a silver dollar. Neither the paper nor the coin had $1 worth of silver metal, however! If you went to a US Assay Office, you could get full value. After failing to talk you out of it, they would get out a set of scales and weights, open the safe and get a pouch of silver powder and measure the appropriate amount into a glassine envelope. They were definitely not happy about all this, particularly since they knew the customer would quickly realize there was nothing he could do with a little envelope of silver dust. |
coins and basic arithmetic, was bus partitions
Hmmn. *Is there some way I could write "bags of dollar coins are the
only thing they sold there at face value" that would be easier to understand? You really don't understand counterfactuals? That means, You really don't understand "what if"s? and fiction? and imagination? Ah. If you're saying that all of your usenet posts are fiction, that explains a lot. Sorry for my unwarranted assumption that you were attempting to make sense. R's, John PS: If the Mint gave away a pony with every bag of dollar coins rather than just frequent flyer miles, I bet they would have shipped way more of them. ObTransit: I gather that you can pay for a bus trip with two dollar coins and a quarter. Has anyone here ever done so? |
coinage, was bus partitions
On 02/01/2012 02:25, Phil Kane wrote:
On Sun, 1 Jan 2012 14:16:42 -0800 (PST), "Peter T. Daniels" wrote: Yeah, I thought I might have occasionally seen a red one! Hawaiian money was not likely to turn up in NYC, especially more than a decade later! As I mentioned before, I did run across one in 1954. -- Phil Kane - Beaverton, OR PNW Beburg MP 28.0 - OE District I remember seeing a Federal Reserve note that was printed in Honolulu. It was the only time that I have ever seen one. |
coinage, was bus partitions
On Jan 2, 7:25*am, "
wrote: On 02/01/2012 02:25, Phil Kane wrote: On Sun, 1 Jan 2012 14:16:42 -0800 (PST), "Peter T. Daniels" *wrote: Yeah, I thought I might have occasionally seen a red one! Hawaiian money was not likely to turn up in NYC, especially more than a decade later! As I mentioned before, I did run across one in 1954. -- Phil Kane - Beaverton, OR PNW Beburg MP 28.0 - OE District I remember seeing a Federal Reserve note that was printed in Honolulu. It was the only time that I have ever seen one. ? Is currency printed anywhere but the Bureau of Engraving and Printing in Washington, DC? There are 12 varieties of FRN, one for each of the 12 Federal Reserve Banks, which differ only in the letter at the beginning of the serial number and carrying the name and number of the Bank that issued it. Boston is #1, New York is #2, etc. It doesn't seem likely that a FRB was placed in Hawaii, a mere territory, when the system was invented in 1916. Isn't #12 San Francisco? |
coinage, was bus partitions
On 02/01/2012 13:21, Peter T. Daniels wrote:
On Jan 2, 7:25 am, wrote: On 02/01/2012 02:25, Phil Kane wrote: On Sun, 1 Jan 2012 14:16:42 -0800 (PST), "Peter T. Daniels" wrote: Yeah, I thought I might have occasionally seen a red one! Hawaiian money was not likely to turn up in NYC, especially more than a decade later! As I mentioned before, I did run across one in 1954. -- Phil Kane - Beaverton, OR PNW Beburg MP 28.0 - OE District I remember seeing a Federal Reserve note that was printed in Honolulu. It was the only time that I have ever seen one. ? Is currency printed anywhere but the Bureau of Engraving and Printing in Washington, DC? There are 12 varieties of FRN, one for each of the 12 Federal Reserve Banks, which differ only in the letter at the beginning of the serial number and carrying the name and number of the Bank that issued it. Boston is #1, New York is #2, etc. It doesn't seem likely that a FRB was placed in Hawaii, a mere territory, when the system was invented in 1916. Isn't #12 San Francisco? IIRC, the Federal Reserve seal had the letter I and the words Honolulu, Hawai'i. It was not military scrip of any sort and had no special colours on it. |
coinage, was bus partitions
I remember seeing a Federal Reserve note that was printed in Honolulu.
It was the only time that I have ever seen one. ? Is currency printed anywhere but the Bureau of Engraving and Printing in Washington, DC? It's all printed in DC, using paper from Dalton MA. In WW II, the bills circulating in Hawaii were overprinted, so they could be recognized and voided if Hawaii were captured. This Wikipedia article has a picture of an overprinted note. Perhaps that's what he was thinking of. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hawaii_overprint_note R's, John |
coinage, was bus partitions
On Sun, 01 Jan 2012 18:25:08 -0800, Phil Kane
wrote: On Sun, 1 Jan 2012 14:16:42 -0800 (PST), "Peter T. Daniels" wrote: Yeah, I thought I might have occasionally seen a red one! Hawaiian money was not likely to turn up in NYC, especially more than a decade later! As I mentioned before, I did run across one in 1954. A little correction to my previous posts - A little WikiP research revealed that the Hawaii-issue $1 bills had brown numbers and the word "Hawaii" on it in several places. The $1 bills with the yellow numbers were overseas military pay in and after WW-II. It was the latter bill that I had in 1954. -- Phil Kane - Beaverton, OR PNW Beburg MP 28.0 - OE District |
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