How I Started Collecting Coins Featuring
Clarence "Kelly" Finger
as told to Dany Rothfeld
Two years ago, when I wrote the article, "How I Started
Collecting Coins," I challenged MSNS members to write an article about their own
experiences, but I was not successful. I was able to convince Pat Heller to
write, and that was it. I decided to start a regular column on the subject. I
will choose individuals for the column, unless you wish to contact me. -- Dany
Clarence 'Kelly' Finger owns a coin-stamp shop in Lansing,
Michigan. Kelly started collecting coins in 1957, when he was about nine years
old. According to Kelly, his father was a design engineer and a draftsman who
worked for the Highway Department, known today as MDOT. Kelly said that
one day he saw his father drawing circles on a wooden board with a compass.
Young Kelly tried to make sense out of this project, without much luck. He also
noticed that his father was putting dates under each circle, starting with 1909.
The next day, Kelly's father emptied his piggybank on the table. He asked Kelly
if he would like to help him "collect coins."
Kelly helped his father find different Lincoln cents and
stick them in their corresponding circles with rubber cement. Apparently, Kelly
did not do much that evening, because he had to go to bed at 9:00 o'clock. The
next day, Kelly's dad brought home a few Whitman coin folders that he had found
at Uncle Walt's Religious Book Store. That was in Cadillac, MI. This store was
the only store in town that carried coin supplies. Young Kelly was frequently
visiting that store to supply his coin needs. Three years later, Kelly and his
dad were having a hard time finding coins with the dates they needed. One day,
his father gave him $50, and instructed him to go to the Cadillac State Bank to
buy a bag of cents. Kelly hopped on his bicycle, which had a basket on the
front. That was Kelly's first bank transaction ever. After the purchase, he
placed the bag in his bicycle basket, came home, and found quite a few of the
dates he needed for his collection. It took him about three or so more years to
complete his cent collection, which he did when he was in high school.
Kelly told me that he was also an avid golf player, and liked
to go fishing in summer. So when it was raining outside, preventing him from
doing his outdoor activities, he would work on his coin collecting.
He completed his cent collection with all circulated coins.
The only coins that he did not find in his pocket change were the 1922 plain and
the 1955 double die cent.
At the end of this interview, Kelly casually mentioned that
he still has the original board that started it all.