Thanks! I guess I’ll just have to sort through all of them and see what is actually there.Canada had silver coins up till 1967. Dimes a Quarters 1968, those where 50% silver. Mexico had silver up to 1970's https://www.coinflation.com/mexico/
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Thanks! I guess I’ll just have to sort through all of them and see what is actually there.Canada had silver coins up till 1967. Dimes a Quarters 1968, those where 50% silver. Mexico had silver up to 1970's https://www.coinflation.com/mexico/
Yes, totally spaced out. Canadian and Mexican as stated is good source for scrap.Canada had silver coins up till 1967. Dimes an Quarters 1968, those where 50% silver. Mexico had silver up to 1970's https://www.coinflation.com/mexico/
That’s the best way. The leftovers can be made into grab bags and put up for sale. What a great way to get someone, or more importantly a kid, in collecting and learning history about the country along the way.Thanks! I guess I’ll just have to sort through all of them and see what is actually there.
I had a bunch of foreign coins and paper money from the 60”s after nam. Was in Navy and saw many ports. Check on eBay. Several had silver content and sold quick. Also sold many paper money.There are a lot of collectors out there.Does anyone know anything about foreign currency ? I have approximately 450 foreign coins from several countries. Does anyone have any information about which countries coins might have silver or any other precious metals in them? The majority of these coins are from the 50’s 60’s and 70’s. Curious as to the possibility of any of them having any value beyond their face value or if they are of any interest to anyone. View attachment 516212View attachment 516213View attachment 516214
Europe uses the Euro now, instead of national currencies. I was in Germany in early to mid 90's and most of the German coins were steel. Deutsche Marks. And after decades of the exchange rate being DM3.5 to the dollar, it dropped to where it was DM1.30 to the Dollar. Most of the young guys I worked with had their car payments about triple. Outside of Europe, was also stationed in Turkey, and for a short time, (Desert Shield/Desert Storm) in Saudi Arabia. Most Turkish coins then (the 80's) were stamped in aluminum. And were for tiny amounts. At that time, a dollar was worth 186 Turkish Lira. Back in the day, ie., prior to WW1, one lira was a silver coin. Shortly before I got there in 83, their small change coins, kurush, were withdrawn from circulation. They were mostly cupronickle, and were decimal fractions of a lira. IIRC, 5, 10, 25 & 50 kurush. Like our nickels and such. Old Turkish coins in silver were selling for more than face value because they were silver... Turkey has been doing the hyperinflation thing for much of the past 80-100 years, now. Bet your (and my!) Turkish coins are worth a fraction of a Turkish Lira.That sucks!!! Maybe we should just travel the world to each country and spend them. Maybe we could buy a few beers
... Exchange rate that day was $1.06 per Euro. So I made money off the deal.
There are collectable Euro coins not many https://www.lovetoknow.com/home/antiques-collectibles/valuable-euro-coins https://www.corkbeo.ie/news/local-news/rare-euro-coins-worth-fortune-30236757 https://www.ebay.com/shop/rare-euro-coins?_nkw=rare+euro+coinsI have a pretty good collection too. A few might be worth a few dollars more than face value, but not much. Any pretty euro EU currency is worthless
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