How much is a box of 50 cent pieces

How much is a box of 50 cent pieces

By Joshua McMorrow-Hernandez for CoinWeek.com ……
 

For the past seven years, I had longed for the opportunity to pore through a bank box of half dollars to look for old and valuable coins. I’ve heard and read the stories for years about fellow collectors who had found silver half dollars, Franklin and Walking Liberty halves, proofs, varieties, errors, and more among rolls of half dollars. Until recently, I never had a “spare” $500 to buy a box of 50 half dollar rolls, each containing 20 half dollars ($10 face).

The first half dollar roll I ever looked through as a coin collector came in 1993, when I was 12 years old. I had only recently read about fellow collectors finding old silver half dollars among rolls. I found a bunch of high-mintage 1971, ’72, ’74, and 1776-1976 Bicentennial half dollars in that first roll and a couple of pieces from the 1980s but no silver.

My fortunes changed for the better in 2009 upon my second half dollar roll hunt. That’s when I found three 1964 Kennedy half dollars (which have a 90 percent silver composition) and seven 40 percent silver halves among five standalone rolls I searched from random banks. Had I more money, I would’ve bought more rolls then, but at that point I was trying to wrap up my bachelor’s degree and was too strapped for cash to keep temporarily pulling money from my checking or then-meager savings to gamble on looking for silver half dollars.

In 2016, my financial picture finally changed to the point that I could finagle $1,000 to buy not just one but two boxes of half dollars. And so I did.

As is the case at virtually every bank in the United States these days, finding a quantity of half dollars is harder than finding a 1982 no-FG Kennedy 50c. Well, not really – but you get the picture. You might walk in to your local bank and find out they’ve “got a few” half dollars on hand, maybe some collecting dust at the bottom of a teller’s till, or perhaps a token roll or two sitting in a vault.

But finding a box of half dollars? Two boxes? That usually requires a special request slip to fulfill. It’s “we need to order these for you – they’ll be here next week” territory.

And that’s exactly what happened.

I learned a week after phoning in my order that Loomis, the well-known cash handling company, had facilitated my special order of half dollars. I was told to come by and pick them up. So I came by. I ended up at the teller window staffed by a young woman who seemed inquisitive about my admittedly unusual bank order.

“I’m a coin journalist writing a story about the types of old and valuable coins I might find in boxes of half dollars,” I casually explained.

“Oh, that’s cool,” she replied, seeming a little less at ease with the guy who just ordered 2,000 half dollars for no apparent reason – other than possibly laundering money at the local casino or whatever other odd things people do with huge amounts of unusual coins.

The teller took my $1,000 in $20s and proceeded to a back office where she retrieved the boxes. She labored to carry out the two thin boxes filled with half dollar rolls, which she delivered to her teller station one at a time. Each box is about the length and width of a quarter sheet cake and weighs about 25 pounds – a rather awkward load for anybody to heft. I closed the transaction with a signature on a withdrawal slip and carried the two boxes to my car. I placed them in the back seat and drove the 50 pounds of precious cargo home.

Let the fun begin…

What Did I Find?

I’m a diehard numismatist who is drawn to numismatic things: old coins, unusual varieties and neat errors. But I’ll admit, I was really hoping to find lots and lots of silver.

Remembering my earlier half dollar roll searching experience in 2009, perhaps my optimism on that front can be understood. So, with silver-lined memories of my previous encounter to inspire me, I broke into Box One, surely to find at least a few silver half dollars lurking in there somewhere.

How much is a box of 50 cent pieces
I was happy when the first roll yielded a 1987-S Proof half dollar, and further intrigued when a 1980-S Proof and a 1985-S Proof fell into my hands by the time I tore open the yellow wrapper on the 10th roll.

But as the evening wore on, things weren’t looking so silverlicious.

My fingertips, charcoal colored after three hours scouring through 50 rolls (1,000 half dollars), I begrudgingly proclaimed to myself: “No silver in the first box.”

I did wind up with three Proofs, a 1987-D Kennedy half, and a half-dozen or so collectors-only Kennedy halves made after 2001, the last year the denomination was produced for general circulation.

Would the second box be kinder to me the next morning? Maybe.

After I had gotten 30 rolls into Box Two, I finally stumbled upon my first and, as it turned out, only silver coin of the two-box lot. A streaky-surfaced 1967 Kennedy half dollar I graded Extremely Fine-40. The only other interesting finds from Box Two were a few more post-2001 Kennedy half dollars and a 1980 Kennedy half dollar with a post-mint counterstamped image of Abraham Lincoln’s profile – surely a coin that was once the centerpiece of a Lincoln-Kennedy “strange coincidences” novelty coin display. Oh, and if you don’t know about all of the eerie coincidences that link the two assassinated presidents, then I urge you to do some research.

At any rate, after 100 rolls and 2,000 half dollars, there were no silver coins, no varieties, no errors.

Does this mean half dollar roll searching has little benefit to silver hoarders or collectors who are looking for some neat finds at face value?

I submit that the answer is “no”, because my unscientific sample of two Kennedy half dollar boxes surely doesn’t represent the opportunities that await in the thousands of other half dollar boxes stacked deep in bank vaults around the United States. There’s plenty of hope for other aspiring half dollar roll searchers out there.

Itemizing My Half Dollar Roll Finds

So, what exactly did those 100 rolls of half dollars I searched through yield? As you’d probably expect, the majority of the half dollars were dated 1971, 1972, 1973, 1974, or 1976. In fact, 64.75 percent of them–or 1,295 out of 2,000–were.

Here’s a rundown of which years I found and how many of each:

  • 1967 – 1
  • 1971 – 355
  • 1972 – 258
  • 1973 – 99
  • 1974 – 251
  • 1976 – 328
  • 1977 – 40
  • 1978 – 23
  • 1979 – 91
  • 1980 – 50
  • 1981 – 30
  • 1982 – 11
  • 1983 – 34
  • 1984 – 25
  • 1985 – 24
  • 1986 – 14
  • 1987 – 2
  • 1988 – 21
  • 1989 – 21
  • 1990 – 20
  • 1991 – 21
  • 1992 – 18
  • 1993 – 21
  • 1994 – 31
  • 1995 – 37
  • 1996 – 37
  • 1997 – 39
  • 1998 – 21
  • 1999 – 18
  • 2000 – 23
  • 2001 – 17
  • 2002 – 7
  • 2004 – 2
  • 2005 – 1
  • 2006 – 1
  • 2007 – 1
  • 2010 – 1
  • 2014 – 6

Clearly, my sorting table was awash with the muted glint of copper-nickel clad. But still I managed to turn my numismatic lemons into analytical lemonade.

How much is a box of 50 cent pieces
My attention turned away from the lack of valuable material in those two boxes and swiftly centered on the neat opportunity I had before me: the chance to conduct some empirical research on the average circulation experience of the half dollars I found.

How many showed signs of wear? How many didn’t? What was the lowest-grade Kennedy half dollar I found? What does this say about our nation’s half dollar as a circulating denomination? I knew my research wouldn’t be very scientific; I’m looking at just 2,000 half dollars from a single bank in one city, and all the half dollars were presumably around the same time. But I thought it would still be insightful (and fun) to look at these coins from that perspective anyway. Besides, it wouldn’t be the first time I’ve tackled the issue of the half dollar coin and its negligible place in daily commerce.

In 2016, I wrote an article entitled “The ‘Other’ Monty Hall Problem: Disappearing Half Dollars”. The piece discusses the incredible infrequency with which 1970s Let’s Make A Deal game show host Monty Hall would find audience members carrying half dollars in their pockets and purses. The gig, as some may recall, would involve Hall offering to trade cash for any unusual items selected guests would have on their person when spontaneously called up from the crowd.

During one telling exchange from a circa 1974 episode, Hall tempted a female audience member with a trade of $50 for each half dollar she may have had in her purse. The dumbfounded guest staggered a crinkle on her face and replied “Half dollars? They don’t make those any more!” Hall wittily replied, “Well, all I know is I have a bunch of them sitting at home in a jar!”

Again, that exchange occurred in 1974 – during the zenith of copper-nickel clad half dollar production. According to the Red Book, more than 280 million half dollars were struck in 1974, and more than 1.1 billion cupro-nickel clad Kennedy halves had been made since 1971, when the metallic composition of the coin was changed from silver to base metal.

The mid-1970s was a period when, based on mintage numbers, there should have been hundreds of millions of half dollars floating around in pockets and purses across the United States. Yet, Hall was (maybe) accumulating his half dollars in a jar, and the guest (probably) had no idea they were even being made anymore!

Of course, this is just one anecdote from a nationally televised game show. Nevertheless, the story illustrates how even in 1974 the Kennedy half dollar was already falling out of use. It’s a socio-numismatic phenomenon many trace back to 1964, when President John F. Kennedy was first honored on the half dollar and millions nationwide saved the coin as mementos of the beloved fallen president who had been murdered on November 22, 1963.

Did Half Dollars Circulate? What I Learned From My Survey

Public sentimentality over the Kennedy half dollar became culturally engrained within months of the new coin entering circulation in 1964. Before long, the denomination no longer penetrated circulation beyond perhaps a few transactions. Many people bought the coins at face value from banks and stored them away in jars and dressers, never even giving those coins a chance to survive in circulation.

This fact is virtually confirmed in part through my survey of the 2,000 half dollars I searched through.

Not surprisingly, I found relatively few Kennedy half dollars that showed real signs of excessive wear. I believe a full one-third of the halves dated from before 1983 could’ve qualified for a technical Uncirculated grade. A clear majority of the latter, post-1983 half dollars appeared to have surfaces unworn by circulation-related handling.

Most of the coins from the early 1980s onward exhibited complete cartwheel luster upon being tilted. This isn’t a mere guesstimate – I actually checked each of the coins for luster, a rather tedious undertaking when dealing with 2,000 coins! The main problem with these uncirculated halves was that the vast majority of the lustrous coins were smothered with bag marks, nicks and scratches, which made them undesirable for keeping and unsuitable for selling.

Of the pre-1983 dates, the year that exhibited the highest overall grade was the 1976 half dollar. This is not surprising, as millions of folks held aside Bicentennial half dollars as keepsakes during and just after their release.

Conversely, the dates showing the most wear overall were the 1971 and 1974 halves, followed by 1972 and 1973 half dollars. The remainder of the half dollars I found from the 1970s and those from the early 1980s exhibited roughly equal amounts of wear.

How much is a box of 50 cent pieces

Looking at the wear on these coins, particularly those made since the late 1970s or early ’80s, I was left to wonder how many of these coins saw wear through typical circulation versus extensive use in casinos (where half dollars have been most widely used over the last 40 or 50 years). Consistent with that point, many of the latter dates–I’ll say those made after 1980–showed extensive edge wear, suggesting heavy use in casino slot machines. On some of the coins with heavy edge wear, the reeding was completely gone, leaving completely smooth edges.

Using Kenneth Bressett’s The Official American Numismatic Association Grading Standards for United States Coins (Whitman) as my reference, I can confidently say that fewer than 100 coins were worn to a grade of less than Extremely Fine. About 10 coins had wear significantly greater than the XF-40 threshold, possibly qualifying for a Very Fine grade – a grade lower than even represented for Kennedy half dollars in the ANA grading standards book! However, that only 10 half dollars out of 2,000 half dollars graded below XF suggests that, even in casinos, most of these coins didn’t circulate very long before winding up in the hands of hobbyists, silver hoarders, or other folks who found value in keeping these coins.

Where Did All of My Half Dollars Go?

I’ve counted my half dollars, I’ve sorted them, and I’ve scoured them for any unusual errors, varieties, or other oddities. So, what next?

Well, it’s time to dump them and move on to the next collecting challenge!

I plan to roll most of my half dollars up and deposit the funds into my bank – and I’ll definitely partake in more roll searching in the days, weeks and months ahead. But in addition to roll searching, isn’t it fun to also spend half dollars?

I certainly think so, and that’s exactly what I’ve done. The best part of spending half dollars in daily shopping and dining is seeing the look of confusion, sometimes curiosity, on the faces of younger cashiers who see a half dollar (sometimes several) pop up during a cash transaction.

My favorite such case so far occurred at my local Dunkin’ Donuts drive-through. I placed a $7.78 drive-through order with a young woman who I venture to say was about 22. I nonchalantly handed her the 16 half dollars and was quite amused sitting in my car as I looked into the drive-through window and watched her look at the coins for about eight seconds and then in a hushed tone gesture toward the baker a few feet away who must’ve been no more than 25.

The baker walked over to the cashier and looked in the palm of her hands.

“Are these dollars?” I heard her quietly ask the baker.

“Nah, they’re fifty-cent pieces,” he assured her.

“Well where do I put them in here?” she asked, pointing at her till.

“Just put ’em at the bottom,” he suggested.

A few moments later, the cashier handed me 22 cents in change and then passed me my two coffees and the chicken biscuit sandwich I ordered. She smiled at me throughout the rest of the transaction very kindly. Apparently, she probably thought I was either peculiarly cute or downright weird, though I’m pretty sure it was the latter.

My experience at Wawa food market was similar. After ordering a cup of coffee, I walked up to pay for my order and handed the sales associate, another woman in her early 20s, five half dollars and three quarters to pay for my $3.21 (with tax) cup of café con leche. She counted the halves, picking through each one as she carefully inspected the reverses of each coin.

“These are half dollars, right?” She asked.

“Yep! Betcha you don’t see these everyday, huh?” I knowingly remarked.

“Nope!” She chuckled. “And I don’t have a place in my drawer for them, either,” she laughed as she tossed them into the bottom of her cash drawer.

The least eventful of these half dollar transactions so far took place at a Wendy’s. The cashier, who was a woman probably in her mid-40s, accepted 13 half dollars for a $6 order involving a hamburger, fries and a medium Coke (by now you might have some sense of the diet of a professional coin writer). I passed her the halves and, remarkably, she took the half dollars without comment. Maybe she has handled a few half dollars in her lifetime? Maybe so…

I’ve dropped some half dollars for tithing purposes at church, too. I peppered some offertory envelopes with them, and I’ve dropped a few as donations when lighting votive candles. Though seemingly a quiet way to disperse half dollars, I wonder if using half dollars at church has really been without consequence. I surely have been stubbing my toes a lot more lately. Maybe I’m a bit clumsier these days.

Or perhaps God is a bit peeved because He doesn’t have a half dollar slot in His till, either.

Summing Up The Half Dollar Fun

I’m willing to say I was essentially skunked on those two boxes of half dollars. In my opinion, one 40 percent silver half, three clad Proofs, and a dozen or so post-2001 collector-only business strikes really don’t make for a good take from two boxes of half dollars. Then again, I didn’t exactly finish empty-handed. The job entailed about 14 hours of labor opening rolls, counting, sorting and inspecting each coin. I’d especially like to give a huge shout out to my girlfriend Jeanine for willingly help me sort the unrolled half dollars by date!

At the very least, I finally got to search through boxes of half dollars, just as I had wanted to do for many years. I may not have scored a full “10” with my finds, but I nevertheless had an excellent time looking through all of those rolls. I’m not discouraged – far from it. I’ll be ordering another box of half dollars soon.

The journey is part of why we coin collectors do what we do. Whether seeking coins for our collections through circulation, from coin dealers or at fancy auctions, it’s not always easy to find what we want. Yet the thrill, the adventure, in tracking down the coins we want and the victorious moments when we finally find them–whether in coin rolls, dealer inventories, or auction catalogs–are sensations every collector loves, and deserves, to know.


How many 50 cents come in a box?

For a quick breakdown: There are 50 pennies in a roll, 40 nickels in a roll, 50 dimes in a roll, 40 quarters in a roll, 20 half-dollar coins in a roll, and 25 dollar coins in a roll. ... Number of Roles in a Box of Coins..

How much does a box of half dollars cost?

Number of US Coins per Roll, Rolls per Box, and Corresponding Face Values.

How much does a 50 cent piece cost?

Kennedy half-dollar coins are not very rare and most of them are worth only their face value of 50 cents. However, some are more valuable, depending on the year they were minted and their condition.

Can you still get rolls of half dollars at the bank?

The best banks for circulated half-dollars are big-name banks with businessmen patrons. Corporate banks deal with large amounts of circulated coins and will have more on hand. Banks that specialize in merchant business will often sell coin rolls to non-account holders. Smaller banks may be more reluctant.