ANA to Display Famous Rarities at 2025 National Money Show

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National Money Show 2025.
Image: American Numismatic Association.

Visitors to the American Numismatic Association (ANA) 2025 National Money Show in the Cobb Galleria Centre in Atlanta, Georgia, February 27 through March 1, can have the thrill of being close up to more than $100 million of historic rare coins and currency, including famous rarities on display from the ANA Edward C. Rochette Money Museum.

“Money is history you can hold in your hands, and we are proud to have more than $100 million of numismatic treasures for the public to enjoy at the National Money Show,” said Thomas J. Uram, President of the nearly 25,000-member ANA. “It’s incredible that such small treasures can hold so much value and history, and we want everyone to have the chance to see this remarkable show in person.”

 

Among the special exhibits from the ANA Money Museum in Colorado Springs, Colorado, are two of the world’s most famous and valuable rare coins, the McDermott-Bebee 1913 Liberty Head Nickel and the Idler/Bebee Type III 1804 Bust Silver Dollar.

Attendees also will have the opportunity to view one of the approximately 40 known surviving gold 1933 Indian Head Eagles designed by acclaimed sculptor Augustus Saint-Gaudens.

Paper money collectors will enjoy seeing a $100 trillion denomination bank note from Zimbabwe, one of the world’s most unusual pieces of paper money.

“The Zimbabwe note is an intriguing and often sought-after collector’s item now. Because of catastrophic hyperinflation of Zimbabwe’s currency, estimated as high as 250,000,000 percent at one point, the value of the $100 trillion notes when they were issued in 2009 was only about $30 each in U.S. dollars,” explained ANA Money Museum Director Doug Mudd.

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There also will be a display of misprinted U.S. paper money from the Bebee Collection and Bank of the United States bank notes from a donation by long-time ANA advocates John and Nancy Wilson of Florida. The exhibit also will include checks signed by President Andrew Jackson and Winfield ‘Old Fuss and Feathers’ Scott, a former Commanding General of the United States Army and the 1852 presidential nominee of the Whig Party.

The Museum Showcase display in Atlanta will also feature a selection of Renaissance Medals and a special Silk Road coins exhibit.

“The Silk Road in Eurasia was history’s first global trade network. Though inspired by economic motivations, it was a vibrant cultural crossroad that connected empires over vast distances and enabled a flood of goods, ideas and technologies for 1,500 years. The coins that facilitated this long-distance trade are durable records of the stories, innovations and cultures of a world not unlike ours today,” explained Mudd.

During the convention, more than 350 dealers from the Southeast and across the United States will be buying and selling rare coins, vintage paper money, medals, tokens, and gold and silver. Many of the on-site numismatic experts will provide free, informal evaluations of the public’s old coins and paper money.

Educational seminars and a children’s treasure trivia game will be offered during the show, and youngsters – as well as adults – can have photos of their face as the portrait on the front of a U.S. $100,000 bill.

The Georgia Numismatic Association is the host club for the convention.

The 2025 National Money Show will be held in Hall B of the Cobb Galleria Centre at 2 Galleria Parkway in Atlanta. The show will be open Thursday and Friday, February 27 and 28, from 10 a.m. to 5:30 p.m., and on Saturday, March 1, from 10 a.m. to 3:30 p.m.

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Admission Thursday and Friday is $10 for adults, children 12 and under admitted free. Admission is free for everyone on Saturday.

Additional information about the ANA Museum Showcase of Famous Rarities at the 2025 Atlanta National Money Show can be found online at NationalMoneyShow.com.

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