| Scotty, 
 Have you read this yet? Regards, Shawn
 
 
 Coin Collection Considered Jack Pot
 
 By DAVID TIRRELL-WYSOCKI
 
 LITTLETON, N.H. (AP) -- Most people feel great when
 they finally fill that old jelly jar with coins, take
 it to the bank and find out they have accumulated a
 couple of hundred nickels, dimes or quarters.
 
 Multiply that amount by about 8,000, and you might get an
 idea how David Sundman feels. He is president of Littleton
 Coin Co., and has just bought what is being described as
 the largest known hoard of American coins: more than 1.7
 million Indian Head cents, Liberty Head nickels and Buffalo
 nickels, some worth hundreds of dollars apiece.
 
 It may be the last collection of that size to be found in
 the country.
 
 ''We'll never, I don't think, see anything like this again,''
 Sundman said.''Usually stories get bigger and get repeated,
 and I've never heard anybody talk about anything even half
 this size. A third this size would be a big deal.''
 
 The coins, mostly from the 19th century, were collected by a
 resident of the Midwest, who doesn't want his name or even
 the state he lives in known.
 
 He kept them in canvas bags and 55-gallon drums, hidden
 behind the walls of his house. Littleton bought several
 hundred bags through an agent and they have been gradually
 arriving at the company.
 
 Each bag holds 4,000 to 5,000 coins, Sundman said. And each
 coin is a piece of American history.
 
 The Indian Head cents are dated 1880-1909 and have been
 out of circulation since the 1950s. The Liberty Head nickels
 are dated 1883-1912 and also have been off the street since
 the '50s, and the Buffalo nickels, dated 1913 to 1938, have
 been gone since the '60s, Sundman said.
 
 Sundman said his company paid several million dollars for
 the hoard, and he expects to be able to sell the coins, one
 at a time, for as much as $7 million.
 
 With nowhere else in the building to store such a huge
 hoard, the bags are stashed in Sundman's office in a pile
 about six feet tall, four feet deep and three feet wide. The
 hoard weighs 7.6 tons, and if placed end to end, the coins
 would stretch nearly 22 miles.
 
 One by one, the coins are being counted, sorted by year
 and mint marks and graded according to their condition.
 Sorters and graders also look for rarities, and already
 have found a 3 1/2-legged 1936 Buffalo nickel worth
 $475 and a three-legged 1937 Buffalo nickel worth about $375.
 
 The sorting is expected to take a year, Sundman said. Then
 the coins will be added to the company's catalogs sent to
 collectors all over the world.
 
 According to the 1997 book, American Coin Treasures and
 Hoards, this hoard surpasses the previous record-size find
 by a long shot. The previous record was set in the 1950s
 when 1 million 1950 nickels were accumulated by a Texas
 collector, author Q. David Bowers wrote.
 
 ''You never believe it until you get it and own it; then
 it's real,'' Sundman said. ''Now, it's real.''
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