When I finally razed that 1940's cabinet so out-of-place in an 1840's home, I looked down and spotted a coin wedged in between the original pine floorboards. "That coin has to be over a hundred years old," I told myself. "Maybe it fell out of some carpenter's pocket when he was building the house or installing the planking."

I fetched a pair of needle nose pliers and realized that pliers alone would not do the job. This coin was stuck in the crack so deep that removing it required the use of a hammer and a long nail that would be used like a crowbar. "Good," I said. "Coins so firmly cemented between planks and rocks and other such places that they have to be "crowbared" out are indubitably rare and priceless."  It's a theory that will find a spot on my upcoming list of Murphy's Laws for Antique Optimists.

I loosened the coin from its slot. Pulled it out gently with the pliers and gave it a look. It was so grimy it looked like it was stuck in a pit of copper-toned tar. "Another good sign!" I said to myself. I made my way to the sink to clean it with the kind of eagerness I see on people's faces at gas stations and variety stores: People who rub those little squares on lottery tickets. "Oh my lucky day!" I said to myself, using words less fit for print. "It's a 1943 copper penny!"

Ever find an old queer looking coin and wonder if it's a "winner?"  Here's the bad news: valuable coins are very scarce. Still … you never know. Here is a little American "change" you'd be well fortuned to find between your floorboards:

Finding Treasure in Old Coins

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