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1864 with L one cent

Lingacre cents

Listing Type:
This item is Cataloged Online in my Personal Coin Collection
Certified by:
Other
Condition or Grade of Item:
MS65
Member Information: christyne254 (0)
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Item Description

USA Coin Book Item ID Number:
110997
Coin Condition:
MS65
Certified By:
Other

All my coins are kept in a photo album, put up in a fire safety lock box. Not graded by any numeristic agency as of yet. I take good care of an inheritance that was passed down to me for the moment. I may have something worth a pretty penny and not know myself. Regardless, it's in my hands, belongs to me, & I have 3 kids that can carry on a family tradition. I'm still learning about all I have, still collecting some I don't have, and for the coins that are not in an album, those are kept in a sealed airtight zippy bag with its information, and placed in a baseball card collection album. Not rich to afford any fancy stuff, but smart to preserve historical tokens that in The Bible..."no copper, steel, bronze, zinc, brass, ect... may have any value" but to a collectionist, it's historical sentimental meaning or reprensentation can tell it's war stories, it's sacrifice, it's struggles to survive through all storms, and still make it to 2015 & end up in the hands of faith. A tip... like any tipical story can change a "no value based on it's component meterial into what makes the world go round... A saved world, a world God created, and a Jesus Christ who died for us to put him first before richness in the saved world... for there's no greater richness than love. Love can't be brought with money, but money can't go to waste and not be invested into good use. You crop what you weep... if you cropped wheat pennies, chances are... you might end up with a Lincoln 1955 wheat ear penny. Life is funny if you have innocence, sence of humor, patience, integrity, knowledge of money investment in piggy banks or like the old folks... under your matress, and experience in a "poors man die" lifestyle. That poor man who died during a war met his stuggles while a 1943 steel penny was created... now in 2015... those who can collecr a piece of history can also collect a value worthy of more than its set component or amount, the sentimental value speaks for itself. A penny for your thought, it's the thought that counts. Value a coin, a fortune... not for the fortunate that you can become, but for the unfortunate momento it was created and what historical event it traveled and left a scar on the world that goes around.