

They are current, though scarce as dragons' teeth. They are negotiable, though not redeemed with wild enthusiasm. * That both are available - if you ask for them. Anthony $1 coin, launched with equal fanfare in 1979, are still out there - even though the public initially gave a peremptory thumbs-down on this economy move. * That the $2 bill, issued in 1976 during America's Bicentennial celebration, and the Susan B. Anthony $1 coin elicited only a mock groan and, "Oh, one of those! I only see one about once a month." "Oh!" she exclaimed, "I'm going to buy these for my grandchildren!" I don't know why."Īt the restaurant where I bought my $2.05 lunch, the cashier did a double take when I paid out two $1 coins and a nickel. But we do have one man who comes in here twice a week and buys up all the $2 bills and $1 coins we have. The only ones we get are from people who turn them in. The cooperative bank down the street had neither $2 bills nor $1 coins.Īt the final stop on my bank sortie, the teller grimaced and sold me two more those! The Federal Reserve Bank doesn't issue either anymore.

The bank gave us 25 before Christmas in case people wanted to give them as presents. "They look too much like quarters.People are afraid to give out one and lose 75 cents. "Nobody wants 'em," he commented laconically. They stare at them and say, 'What's this?'"Īround the corner at a savings and loan association, I pushed one of my crisp the young man behind the glass reached for the silvery-looking coins. If I buy something for, say $1.85, I hand over two Susan B. "The only way we get these," she says, "is that occasionally someone shoves them at us and says, 'Get rid of this! Give me real money!' Personally," she confesses, "I like the $1 coins for laughs. In a few minutes she returned with the offbeat currency in hand. "Oh, wow!" was the answer I got, followed by a pause, and then, "OK." She left her window and walked to the far end of the teller cages. Anthony $1 coin, shift tongue into cheek, and see what happens.

Just ask any teller for two $2 bills and one Susan B. Five dollars will buy you some fun at your local banks.
