How I Started Collecting Coins -- By Dany Rothfeld -- (Fall 2007)
TOM KLUNZINGER
In 1954, a nine-year-old boy noticed that he had a Lincoln cent with the year of
his birth (1944), which also had an “S” below the date. He asked his mother what
the “S” stood for, and she told him to look it up. This was the beginning of
over a half century of coin collecting for young Tom Klunzinger.
Soon after this incident, Tom acquired
his first Whitman blue folders from Link’s Sport Shop in East Lansing. Although
Link’s had rare dates for sale, he quickly learned that the best place to find
most of the coins he wanted was by searching through a big bag of 5,000 cents
that came from East Lansing State Bank. And this is how Tom spent many of his
Saturday mornings. In 1955, Tom and his friend Bill Bachmann heard from a
friendly bank teller about “a whole lot” of Barber coins and Liberty nickels
that an elderly lady had turned in for cash; but unfortunately, those coins had
been sent to another bank. Through the same teller, they were invited over to
old Doc Mercer’s house; he took them to his basement, removed a panel from the
wall, and took out several metal boxes full of $20 gold coins--which he noted
were illegal to own. They were told they’d “better not tell anyone.”

In 1956, young Tom subscribed to the
Numismatic Scrapbook Magazine. Each month he eagerly looked forward to the many
coins offered in it. He joined the Lansing Coin Club (#73), which met in a
downstairs room at the Lansing State Journal building, where he was able to
trade duplicates for the scarcer coins he desired.
Eventually, in 1958, he found it necessary to buy the two Lincoln Cents which he
hadn’t been able to find: the 1914-D and the 1909-S VDB, which cost $32.50 (!)
in Fine. (He sold it six years later for $140!!)
Having completed most of the current series from circulation, for most of high
school he set collecting aside, returning to it during his freshman year at
Michigan State University, when he was earning his own money. By that time, he
had subscribed to Coin World, and tried to upgrade his later sets to
“uncirculated” several times, only to have his money order returned with a
“Sorry, sold” note.
... Exhibits required a fair amount of work, the 1987
exhibit remains a sentimental favorite, since it was a one-coin exhibit, and
that one coin was something I just kind of stumbled upon, and its acquisition
led to the above-mentioned research (which required a trip to London), the
CNA Journal article and the trip to Colorado Springs as a result of winning
the Best of Show.”
When Tom began collecting and looking
through lots of change, there were still good things in circulation. He says
that this might still be true today, with all the varieties and doublings that
the “microscope collectors” have brought to the public’s attention.
Tom’s advice to young collectors is to start with that
time-honored phrase, “Read the book before you buy the coin.” Become familiar
with some aspect of history that interests you, whether it’s American, English,
or of the ancient world. Then pursue those numismatic items which illustrate the
period in some way. “While you certainly can’t get them in circulation as in the
old days, there’s enough material available in the market that you don’t have to
spend a whole lot of money to acquire worthwhile items.”
“I still follow that advice--last year Pope Benedict XVI
thrust the relatively obscure Byzantine Emperor Manuel II into the contemporary
spotlight; and the more I read about Manuel II, the more I wanted to illustrate
a particular period in his life through contemporary coins, so that’s what I’m
working on now, slowly because the coins are not readily available. But that’s
the fun of it--looking and looking, then finding what you want in some obscure
place. (And then maybe making an exhibit out of it!)” In the late 1990's Tom
became interested in coins of the Byzantine Empire, 476-1453 A.D. (and is now
Treasurer of the Association of Dedicated Byzantine Collectors).
I have known Tom for many years, since the mid-1980s, and am always amazed at
the things he accomplishes in a day. It makes me wonder how many hours are in
HIS days...
Beside his coin collecting and his regular work, he spends
time with his numismatic friends in the many coin clubs that he belongs to,
traveling to practically every major show around the country and world. He is
also involved in politics and theater. He is a very good actor and writes screen
plays as well. Starting November 23 Tom will be playing the King in the
children’s musical “Rumpelstiltskin” at Riverwalk Theatre in Lansing.