oggy
Joined: 8-Mar-2016
Posts: 1777
Posted: 2-Nov-2017, 19:07
#
Posted: 2-Nov-2017, 19:07
#
These fascinate me.
One example is the ABC Peso. Based on Peace dollar blanks and minted in the USA in mintages over 10 million, they were minted as currency reserve.
They never really circulated, and shortly after Machado was overthrown, they were all melted down. However the Cuban numismatic society requested a bag, and around 1000 of each date were set aside for collectors. There's probably 1000-1500 each extant. The exception is the 1937 where none were held back and just a single bag slipped and split as it was being loaded onto a boat, the Patria. Around 20-40 extant examples. (Ps. looking to buy a better peso if anybody has one!)
More info here:
http://www.cubannumismaticassociation.com/CNANL-03/abc.html
Anyway, it's a beautiful coin and got me to thinking about other 'high mintage rare coins' that aren't commonly talked about. Tell me your stories.
cmaclean
Joined: 12-Oct-2014
Posts: 496
Posted: 2-Nov-2017, 20:14
#
Posted: 2-Nov-2017, 20:14
#
The Scottish James VI £20 piece had a tiny mintage of 193 pieces. It has a surprisingly high survival rate of about 10% as there are thought to be around 20 known examples.
oggy
Joined: 8-Mar-2016
Posts: 1777
Posted: 3-Nov-2017, 01:29
#
Posted: 3-Nov-2017, 01:29
#
Quote: "cmaclean"The Scottish James VI £20 piece had a tiny mintage of 193 pieces. It has a surprisingly high survival rate of about 10% as there are thought to be around 20 known examples.
It's a lovely coin, but I'm not sure it qualifies as a 'modern coin with high mintage!'
Still, I'd take it off the museums hands if they no longer wanted it
CassTaylor
Joined: 30-May-2014
Posts: 8551
Posted: 3-Nov-2017, 11:16
#
Posted: 3-Nov-2017, 11:16
#
'Modern high mintage scarce coins' can apply to many US classic commemorative coins that had their unsold brethren melted down
cmaclean
Joined: 12-Oct-2014
Posts: 496
Posted: 5-Nov-2017, 22:28
#
Posted: 5-Nov-2017, 22:28
#
Quote: "oggy"It's a lovely coin, but I'm not sure it qualifies as a 'modern coin with high mintage!'
Still, I'd take it off the museums hands if they no longer wanted it
Ah. For some reason I read it as 'low mintage'. I suppose the meaning of 'modern coin' will differ from person to person. There's one available here if you have a spare £85,000 lying about:
https://www.sovr.co.uk/scotland-james-vi-1576-gold-twenty-pounds-bm01689.html
The coins of the Kingdom of Hawaii from the 1880s would fit your question perfectly. Some of the denominations were minted in the hundreds of thousands. Most of them were exchanged for US currency after the annexation meaning they are much rarer than their original mintage would suggest.
https://en.numista.com/catalogue/pieces16183.html
https://en.numista.com/catalogue/pieces16186.html
Another case would be late Scottish silver coinage. I'm not aware of the original mintages. I'd assume they were in the hundreds of thousands at the least. These coins are now extremely rare due to the 1707-9 Scottish recoinage. The old Scottish silver was collected in and reminted into coins of the recently unified Great Britain. The scarcity of pre-1706 Scottish silver is testament to the thoroughness of the recoinage, which was carried out under the supervision of Sir Isaac Newton.
arvin11
Joined: 31-Mar-2017
Posts: 376
Posted: 7-Nov-2017, 13:35
#
Posted: 7-Nov-2017, 13:35
#
Republic India has many coins that are modern but rare..
for example...
1996 - Rs 2 - Neetaji Subhas Chandra Bose
1996 - Rs 5 - Crop Science Conference2005 - Rs 5 - 75 years of Dandi March [Cupro-Nickel Issue]
2006 - Rs 5 - ONGC [Cupro-Nickel Issue] [1]
2007 - Rs 5 - 150th Anniversary of Bal Gangadhar Tilakj
2007 - Rs 5 – 150 Years of War of Independence [Cupro-Nickel Issue]
1969 - Rs 10 - Mahatma Gandhi Centenary
1970 - Rs 10 - Food For All
1972 - Rs 10 - Independence Jubliee
coin collector.....
JRo69
Joined: 9-Jul-2015
Posts: 936
Posted: 7-Nov-2017, 17:22
#
Posted: 7-Nov-2017, 17:22
#
jokinen
Joined: 10-Feb-2013
Posts: 1858
Posted: 7-Nov-2017, 21:43
#
Posted: 7-Nov-2017, 21:43
#
Quote: "JRo69"I think this one qualifies:
https://en.numista.com/catalogue/pieces19359.html
I actually own one, but it is indeed relatively hard to find.
And what about this 1991 Angolan 100 Kwanza? No mintage known but it is definitely not common.
https://en.numista.com/catalogue/pieces29619.html
Platypus
Joined: 4-Sep-2017
Posts: 32
Posted: 8-Nov-2017, 03:55
#
Posted: 8-Nov-2017, 03:55
#
I don't know how accurate it is, exactly, but apparently US minted fewer coins in 2009 than in other years. There are still millions of them out there, but they're sufficiently scarce to command a small premium.
After doing a lot of coin roll hunting for quarters and nickels, I can confirm - not a whole lot of '09 coins out there!
Camerinvs
Joined: 19-May-2016
Posts: 5302
Posted: 8-Nov-2017, 06:10
#
Posted: 8-Nov-2017, 06:10
#
There were 206,398 Canadian 50¢ coined in 1921, but only about 75 survived because almost all were melted and recoined in 1929. See the
catalogue page (I've just sent some corrections yet to be approved) and
this post.
EDIT ─ Thanks to
bbybugs for validating the changes so quickly.
₱o$₮ag€ $₮am₱$ a₹€ mo₹€ £€₲i₮ima₮€ a$ a ƒo₹m oƒ ¢u₹₹€nc¥ ₮ha₦ ₮h€ €₦₮i₹€ "¢oi₦" ₱₹odu¢₮io₦ oƒ ₦au₹u o₹ ₦iu€. ••• £€$ ₮im฿₹€$-₱o$₮€ $o₦₮ ₱£u$ £é₲i₮im€$ €₦ ₮a₦t qu'o฿j€₮$ mo₦é₮ai₹€$ qu€ £a ₱₹odu¢₮io₦ €₦₮iè₹€ d€ «mo₦₦ai€$» d€ ₦au₹u ou d€ ₦iu€.
jokinen
Joined: 10-Feb-2013
Posts: 1858
Posted: 9-Nov-2017, 21:57
#
Posted: 9-Nov-2017, 21:57
#
I got this one today:
https://en.numista.com/catalogue/pieces16160.html
Modern common coin but relatively rare.
Used time zone is UTC+1:00.
Current time is 18:06.