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The E-Sylum: Volume 10, Number 36, September 10, 2007, Article 19 GOEVERT'S LINCOLN CENT PRICE STUDY Dick Johnson writes: "My radar screen picked up a price study of Lincoln cents on the Internet this week. It covers the advancing price for key date Lincoln cents. It calls itself 'Long Term Value Trend Study of Lincoln Cent Dates.' High quality images illustrate a well-written intro. I found only one booboo: the dreaded redundancy 'reverse side' (reverse means back side, thus the redundancy). The charts trace yearly prices back to 1950 and cover 13 conditions where the compiler found them available. The compiler hid his identity, but with some digging I learned the author is Daniel Joseph Goevert of Wichita, Kansas. I got in touch with Dan this week and learned a little more about his website and his credentials. He's an aviation industrial engineer by profession and works for a private aircraft manufacturer in the massive aircraft industry centered around Wichita. His initial foray into coin price analysis dates back to 1986 when he published "Value Trends of United States Coins" containing, as he stated, "virtually every collectible U.S. coin, in conditions ranging from Good to Proof." "This exposure," he adds, "helped me establish a consulting relationship as Coin Editor with Edmund Publications from 1989 to 2000." Five of his articles on other numismatic subjects are on his web site, which he established in 2002. These include Mercury dimes, Coinage and the War of 1812, New Orleans Mint after Katrina, and one on coin telemarketing fraud. These articles can be found at these URLs: coin-collecting-mercury-dimes.html US-Coinage-and-the-War-of-1812.html investing-and-rare-coins.html a-case-of-coin-telemarketing-fraud.html New-Orleans-Mint-after-Katrina.html Dan's study of Lincoln cents is well worth the look. Price studies aid potential buyers and are often useful for beginning collectors until they feel confident to trust their own judgment in purchasing decisions." To read the complete study, see: Full Story Wayne Homren, Editor The Numismatic Bibliomania Society is a non-profit organization promoting numismatic literature. See our web site at coinbooks.org. To submit items for publication in The E-Sylum, write to the Editor at this address: whomren@coinlibrary.com To subscribe go to: https://my.binhost.com/lists/listinfo/esylum | |
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