MiddenMonster
Bronze Member
And if I had a penny like this I would be thinking a lot of thoughts:
Rare Penny Found in Boy’s Lunch Money Could Fetch Up to $1.7 Million in Auction
A 1943 copper Lincoln cent. It is believed only 20 of them were struck, and the government denied they even existed--until this kid found one in his lunch money change in 1947. He hung on to it until he died last year. Now it's going on the auction block, where one previously sold for the $1.7 million used to value this coin. The article states that it is believed only 20 of them were struck. But how many are actually known to exist? And if the owner of the one that was sold several years ago buys this one, wouldn't the value go up a lot for both of them?
Rare Penny Found in Boy’s Lunch Money Could Fetch Up to $1.7 Million in Auction
A 1943 copper Lincoln cent. It is believed only 20 of them were struck, and the government denied they even existed--until this kid found one in his lunch money change in 1947. He hung on to it until he died last year. Now it's going on the auction block, where one previously sold for the $1.7 million used to value this coin. The article states that it is believed only 20 of them were struck. But how many are actually known to exist? And if the owner of the one that was sold several years ago buys this one, wouldn't the value go up a lot for both of them?