Dealer Offering $1 Million For Missing Nickel By David T-W CONCORD, N.H. (May 26) - A nationwide bounty hunt is under way - with a $1 million reward. The target: a 90-year-old nickel. After being born of questionable, some say clandestine, circumstances, five 1913 Liberty Head nickels surfaced in the 1920s. Two are in private collections, two are in museums, but the whereabouts of the fifth has confounded collectors for at least 40 years. ''There's a little bit of gimmick to it,'' concedes Paul Montgomery, president of Bowers and Merena Galleries of Wolfeboro, N.H., which is offering the reward. ''But it's all about trying to find the coin.'' The Liberty Head Nickel was minted from 1883 to 1912, when it was replaced by the Indian or Buffalo Nickel. Five Liberty nickels, however, were minted illegally in 1913, possibly by a mint official. They were never placed into circulation and for many years were considered illegal to own because they were not a regular issue. In 1996, Bowers and Merena auctioned one of the 1913 nickels for $1.4 million, the first coin to sell for more than $1 million. It is because of that price that the company is offering at least $1 million for the missing nickel. ''Everybody in the industry would love to see it,'' said Montgomery. As one story goes, the coin may have been owned by a North Carolina dealer killed in a car crash in 1962. Part of the mystery is a theory that the dealer was carrying the coin to a buyer named Reynolds. People have searched the roadside, said Lawrence Lee, curator of the American Numismatic Association Money Museum, which owns one of the nickels. ''He was killed on his way there,'' Lee said. ''Did the Reynolds' family actually get it? Was it in the car wreck?'' Beth Deisher, editor of Coin World magazine in Sidney, Ohio, said a nickel was recovered from the wreckage, but it was not one of the original five. The date had been altered. The dealer ''claimed to have access to the genuine, through a client named Reynolds,'' she said. ''We believe he had an altered date coin he often carried with him and put on display.'' Lee said many have claimed to have the missing coin. ''There are lots of counterfeits,'' he said. ''We have maybe 50 examples in the museum.'' Lee believes publicity from the reward offer will get people to start looking for it again, and maybe it will show up in an estate or a grandmother's attic. He figures if the owner knows about the coin, ''they couldn't resist, sooner or later, bragging to somebody or selling it to somebody.'' AP-NY-05-26-03 1444EDT Copyright 2003 The Associated Press. The information contained in the AP news report may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or otherwise distributed without the prior written authority of The Associated Press. All active hyperlinks have been inserted by AOL. Anyways.....if someone on ClutchCity has this 90 year old nickel.....please split the reward with me!
Thanks for your thoughts. And you can bet your bottom dollar that I will be looking out for that nickel.
EGads man we have sodas on the Plane! Mr. Burns to Homer as he trys to put the billion dollar bill into the soda machine
CONCORD, N.H. (May 26) - A nationwide bounty hunt is under way - with a $1 million reward. The target: a 90-year-old pickle. After being born of questionable, some say clandestine, circumstances, five 1913 Green & Lumpy pickles surfaced in the 1920s. Four have been eaten & ****ted out, but the whereabouts of the fifth has confounded collectors for at least 89 years.
EGads HtownRocks3! Shorten your new sig man. I'm not trying to be an ass, but that's way too freakin long. Back to matter at hand: I have this penny from 1955 and the front looks normal, but on the back it's reads: ONE CENT UNITED STATES OF AMERICA I've been doing some surface research, and I have no idea if this is worth anything good. Does anyone here know?
Wow. I didn't really expect anything to come up. Thanks MoBalls. I can now throw this penny in with my regular stack (considering that if I clean it up, it will only be worth $0.50 max). I almost pissed myself when I saw the $1250 for 1955, but quickly realized it's for the rare double die dating.