One of my hobbies is coin collecting. I enjoy building mint and date sets of American coins, and a few varieties of Canadian coins. And I have found that there is much to be gained from the hobby of numismatics.
Coins are beautiful items, worth much more than simply face value. You can enjoy the physical beauty of the coin, considering it’s strike and luster. But if you look deeper, you can see a whole lot more.
Coins represent history. Many of our nation’s coins have an historical significant attached to them.

Lincoln Cent - Obverse
This is one of my favorite coins to collect. With a hundred years of production, and from three different mints, the Lincoln cent can turn out to be a very large collection. And finding the older varieties in a high grade can be quite challenging. This is a collection that may take years to complete: to find just the right coins that catch the eye, and look great in my album. It’s a challenge worth the effort to complete.

Wheat Reverse
My favorite variety of the Lincoln cent is the Wheat back. When buying rolls of cents to dig through and find certain dates, I tend to keep “Wheat Pennies” no matter what grade thay may be. I just have a special place in my heart for these beautiful coins.

Lincoln Cent - Steel
Steel cents are dfferent enough that they catch the eye quickly. High quality examples of 1943 cents tend to stand out dramatically in any collection. And the history that they represent is breathtaking.

Memorial Reverse
The imposing marble Lincoln Memorial provides the central motif, with the legends E Pluribus Unum and UNITED STATES OF AMERICA completing the design, together with the denomination. In his book Theory and Practise of Numismatic Design, Steve Crooks states that because the Lincoln Memorial is shown in sufficient detail to discern the statue of Lincoln on the reverse of the penny, Abraham Lincoln was the only person to be depicted on both the obverse and reverse of the same United States coin until the release of the New Jersey state quarter in 1999, which depicts George Washington crossing the Delaware River on the reverse.
And finally in 2009, the Lincoln cent will be released with four different reverses. These four designs, unveiled September 22, 2008 at a ceremony held at the Lincoln Memorial on the National Mall in Washington, D.C., are:

Log Cabin Reverse

Indiana Reverse

Illinois Reverse

DC Reverse
And in 2010, yet another redesigned reverse for the Lincoln cent will be minted that “shall bear an image emblematic of President Lincoln’s preservation of the United States of America as a single and united country,” and so the Lincoln Memorial reverse will be replaced.
The history represented in just this one denomination of American coin is staggering.

1909 Lincoln Cent
And while that penny was in circulation, think about all the world events that took place. That cent was in someone’s pocket during World War 1. It may have been donated to a war cause during World War 2. It might have been in a coin roll in a bank while the US was in Vietnam. It may have been circulating through the stores, or in a collector’s safe when the Berlin Wall fell. It’s seen the greatest times, with great men and women like Teddy Roosevelt, Martin Luther King, Jr., Ronald Reagan, and George W. Bush.
And it’s witness the worst of times, and even worse people. It existed during Hitler and the Holocaust; it suffered silently with America through the racist civil rights battles of the 1960s in the South; it was bearing mute witness during 9/11.
And now you are holding it, as it faces unimaginable future events. What else might it see?
If that coin could speak, what would it tell you? It has a lot for us to learn. Are we willing to listen? That coin hold much more value than the “ONE CENT” printed on it’s back.
Dig into your pocket. Look at your change. What history might you find in your pocket?
