Thanks Rupiah for the advice on locating the shoulder fold.
I live in Toronto so I'd imagine that because of the volume of coins circulating through the banks, there is bound to be an abundance of older coin.
I went into my local bank and asked if they had anything special. They said that this "old guy" (Why is it always old guys?
) came in and cashed in a whole lot of stuff the day before. I offered to buy it all, that way it saves the tellers the trouble of picking through it.
This is what they gave me:
15 rolls of hand wrapped pennies which included 5 rolls of coins from 1970-1977, most of which were RED.
2 rolls of 1973 RCMP quarters (no large bust though)
1 roll each of 1976, 77, and 2 rolls of 79 quarters (I suppose they're ok to keep if only for their metal content)
Today's finds from the penny rolls include:
1 x 1919 USA
35 x 1969
27 x 1968
12 x 1967
4 x 1966
5 x 1965
12 x 1964
9 x 1963
7 x 1962
4 x 1961
2 x 1960
7 x 1959
2 x 1958
6 x 1957
2 x 1956
1 x 1955
1x 1954
3 x 1953
1 x 1952
3 x 1951
2 x 1950
1 x 1947 ML (ptd 7)
1 x 1946
1 x 1945
2 x 1942
They told me that they shipped the mutilated stuff out the day before and that had the rest of the guy's hoard in it. The teller said that there were 2 rolls of 50 cent pieces, pre 1986 dollars, and a bunch of old notes with the queen on them that "looked like Canadian Tire money." (I can only assume they are 1954)
She said that she didn't think to keep the 50 cent or dollar coins because "nobody uses them or asks for them".
I left my contact information with them after educating them on these items and they now know to keep everything for me. How nice! The only thing they would not bend the rules on were the $1000 bills
Tips on getting old coin/paper money from banks:
1. Be friendly: Go in when they're not busy. Don't ask them to do too much. The teller told me that there is another collector in the same mall who wants them to pick through and save specific items...They don't have time for that!
2. When you see hand rolled coin in plain paper, it's most likely someone rolling up their change jar, a favourite hiding place for old coins!
3. Offer to buy everything in one shot if you can afford it. This saves the tellers time and aggro.
4. Just ask! Most people don't collect. Tellers won't know what you want unless you ask for it!
5. Patronize the same branch. The tellers will get to know you after a few visits.
6. find out when they ship out their mutilated currency, then get in there before that day!
Happy hunting!
Dean