Coin Collecting
Coin Collecting was first offered in 1938 and last revised in 2003.
Requirements | Counselors |
Worksheets, Aids & Resources | Earned By |
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Requirements
- Understand how coins are made, and where the active U.S. Mint facilities
are located.
- Explain these collecting terms:
- Obverse
- Reverse
- Reeding
- Clad
- Type set
- Date set
- Explain the terms poor, good, very good, fine, very fine, extremely fine,
and uncirculated. Show five different grade examples of the same coin type.
Explain the term “proof” and why it is not a grade. Tell what
“encapsulated” coins are.
- Know three different ways to store a collection, and describe the
benefits, drawbacks, and expenses of each method. Pick one to use when
completing requirements.
- Do the following:
- Identify the people depicted on the following denominations of current
U.S. paper money: $1, $2, $5, $10, $20, $50, and $100.
- Explain "legal tender."
- Describe the role the Federal Reserve System plays in the distribution
of currency.
- Do the following:
- Demonstrate to your counselor that you know how to use two U.S. or
world coin reference catalogs.
- Read a numismatic magazine or newspaper and tell your counselor about
what you learned.
- Describe the 1999-2008 50 State Quarters Program. Collect and show your
counselor five different quarters you have acquired from circulation.
- Collect from circulation a set of currently circulating U.S. coins.
Include one coin of each denomination (cent, nickel, dime, quarter,
half-dollar, Susan B. Anthony or Sacagawea dollar). For each coin, locate
the mint marks, if any, and the designer’s initials, if any.
- Do ONE of the following:
- Collect and identify 50 foreign coins from at least 10 different
countries.
- Collect and identify 20 bank notes from at least five different
countries.
- Collect and identify 15 different tokens or medals.
- Collect a date set of a single type since the year of your birth.
- Do ONE of the following:
- Tour a U.S. Mint facility, the Bureau of Engraving and Printing, or a
Federal Reserve bank, and describe what you learned to your counselor.
- With your parent’s permission, attend a coin show or coin club
meeting, or view the Web site of the U.S. Mint or a coin dealer, and
report what you learned.
- Give a talk about coin collecting to your troop or class at school.
- Do drawings of five Colonial-era U.S. coins.
Troop Merit Badge Counselors
The following individuals are merit badge counselors for
Coin Collecting.
Their e-mail addresses and phone numbers are in the Troop Directory.
Howard Malatzky
Carmine Tabacco
Worksheets & Resources
The merit badge pamphlet was last revised in 2002.
The following worksheets can be downloaded from MeritBadge.com, and are highly recommended as tools for organizing your
work on this merit badge:
Worksheet in Acrobat .pdf format or in
Microsoft Word .doc format
Scouts Earning Coin Collecting
Not yet available
Requirements | Counselors |
Worksheets, Aids & Resources | Earned By |
Return to Merit Badge List
Last Updated: November 9, 2004