There were two collections. One from the Sunoco Stations that were collected individually, every time someone purchased gasoline. Then there was the bronze set, which a person won, based on a winning coin from the station. Bronze is worth around $30+ because of its rarity. The other isn't worth anything, unless a person is a collector. I saw it on-line for sale at $30-good luck!
Its value will be only for the silver it contains.
Weigh them up in Troy ounces (there are 31.1 grams in a Troy ounce), multiply by .925 (the Sterling content), then multiply by the current silver spot.
You can see the current silver spot at www.kitco.com
Dan Moore
The Working Man's Rare Coins
http://www.workingmancoins.com
DEPENDING on the condition of frame and coins-very good 150+
Other then silver value there is no collectors value on Franklin Mint items.......
$11.27 (eBay, as of 27 August 2007)
I don't know if this is series 1 or 2
Pls send value
15 in the first series, 12 in the second series, and 12 in the third....so, 39.
I have all three in that series. I am also looking for information ao the series.
$199
DEPENDING on the condition of frame and coins-very good 150+
The Collection - album series - was created in 1993.
They used a series of landmarks.
I have this set also and want to see what its worth. I have seen them advertised for as much as $635 and a low as $136. I have been offered $57. Considering what I paid, I still have them..
A series of landmarks guided us to the end of the trail.
A collection of lectures is commonly referred to as a series or course.
I hope so it really does need a HD Collection! The Thief games series are classic games and classic games need a HD Collection!
Data Series.
Benjamin Franklin. Benjamin Franklin was well-regarded both as a statesman and a scientist in Europe and America. Born in 1706, Franklin established himself as a printer in Philadelphia in the 1720s, and proceeded to publish the "Pennsylvania Gazette" and "Poor Richard's" almanac. After he retired from printing in 1743, he commenced a series of experiments in electricity where he proved that lightning and electricity were one and the same. He used that discovery to invent the lightning rod. Franklin went on to become a public figure, serving as an Assemblyman in the Pennsylvania legislature, the Postmaster General of Colonial America, and a colonial representative to Britain. During the Revolutionary War, Franklin served as America's ambassador to France, where his scientific reputation earned him great respect in the French court. After he returned to America, Franklin served in the Constitutional Convention in 1786. He died in 1790.