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Old 03-25-2019, 06:43 PM
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Vintagevault13 Vintagevault13 is offline
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Join Date: Sep 2013
Location: Georgia
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Nunzio11 View Post
My father passed away unexpectedly in October at the age of 80. He was a type A personality, electrical engineer so very organized to say the least. All the financial records were extremely organized. Accounts, statements, passwords, etc all kept in a safe place just in case. He sat my brother and I down one weekend and went though everything line by line, just in case. The finances were simple to deal with and my mom is in very good shape.

What he didn’t account for is a large box of silver coins he’s been collecting for over 40 years. He never spoke about them in detail. We would talk vaguely about them and I never really asked the questions I should have when I had the chance. Don’t underestimate the significance of your collection to your loved ones. We can say toss it or the financial side of it doesn’t matter but it does. Your collection is a part of who you are and your loved ones will look at it as so. They may not say so now or even joke about it but once gone they will look for a connection. Make it as easy for them as possible. Through this I’m now tasked with learning about the coin hobby and coins back to the 1800s but also trying to figure out the significance each one may of had to my dad. It takes time but also keeps a connection to him alive.


This post really resonated with me. I have occasionally kicked around the idea of just selling everything. I may soon sell parts of my collection, but I have decided to keep my 71 - 76 sets to pass on to my kids. These are the sets that defined my childhood and I want my kids to have that connection. Inside each binder I have included a document that I typed up with important info about the specific set. More importantly, I also included information about why the set was so special to me as a kid. I want to make these sets a sort of “time capsule” of my childhood.


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Ed
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