Possibly unique glass penny from World War II sells for $70k
FORT LAUDERDALE, Fla. -- An experimental glass penny made during World War II, possibly the only one of its kind, has sold at auction for $70,500.
Heritage Auctions announced Friday that the penny was sold during Thursday’s auction based in Fort Lauderdale, Florida, to an American buyer who wishes to remain anonymous.
During the war, copper was needed for ammunition. The U.S. Mint authorized tests that included making uncirculated pennies from other metals, plastic and rubber. The Blue Ridge Glass Co. in Tennessee, a manufacturer that no longer exists, made experimental pennies using tempered glass.
The penny’s former owner, Roger Burdette, says the coins’ impressions weren’t precise, their weight and size weren’t uniform and they developed sharp edges. He says they were likely destroyed. He says only one other glass penny exists, and it is broken.
The Mint made 1943 pennies from low-grade steel covered in zinc. It started making copper pennies again by 1944.