I started German this semester and asked the professor about purchasing any old German coins from any era and he gave me this one site that is near me. I want to buy a silver Reichsmark coin, (Jewish so don't worry I'm not glorifying anything) but I heard they're illegal to own in Germany and I'm not sure if that's also the case in the US; specifically California.
In an eBay grab bag, I got a 2003 S proof nickel (estimated pr65/pf65) with an 18 degree rotation on the reverse. I'm having trouble finding the value of rotation errors. Can someone help me?
I have a $1 dollar bill 1981A with the serial number E77755777D. I know it's a radar, binary, repeater, and a bookend serial number. Problem is I can't find the value of a dollar bill like this online. It's in MS60 condition. I'm sorry I don't have a picture of it but I can't take one of it.
It was my great great uncle Herbert Choy's. He never served in Japan and enlisted the day after Pearl Harbor. How can he have found it intact on US soil?
I have this military medal owned by Herbert Choy (look up if you don't know who he is) and I can't identify it anywhere. I think it may have been a custom made medal for him but I don't know. It would be great for my family history to know what this is.
I like searching bicentennial quarters for their known errors but when I examined this particular quarter, it appeared to have a die clash. I want confirmation if this is an actual clash or just a scratch.