See us at the Whitman Baltimore Expo, March 5-7, Table #935

Updated: March 5th 9:39PM ET
(800) Coins-99:  7AM-11PM ET EVERY DAY
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March 4-7, 2026: The Whitman Baltimore Expo

Balimore 2026-03-03

March 4th: Day 1

Team CRO was up and out early on Wednesday as we made the long schlepp from our hotel to the convention center in raw, cold weather so we could arrive in the dealer trading rooms before all the good stuff was gone.

But before we could even walk in the door, another dealer stopped us in our tracks by shouting those magic words “Hey, I have some coins that may be for you” right there in the hallway. And in this case they were absolutely right, allowing us to snap up two pieces of choice early gold which will look amazing on an upcoming EB, or in a bourse case like here at the Whitman show.

After which we headed into the room and found another 15 cool, interesting, mostly old holdered US coins of all kinds.

And then migrated on to Stack’s-Bowers lot viewing where we pored through 3 catalogs full of medals, tokens, colonials and US coins, finding more to bid on than I had anticipated based on my pre-show, online perusal. Also interesting, the lot viewing assistant there told me that I had (and I quote) “beautiful hair”, the first time anyone other than my wife has said to me since I had that Flock of Seagulls do in the mid 1980s:

Flock of Seagulls

So that was exciting.

Anyway, after we finished viewing, we figured to take a look though other dealers’ coins in the hallway, and there were ample opportunities to do so as literally every single table was occupied by dealers rifling through boxes of coins of all sorts. And so we joined in, finding more than our fair share of interesting items from usual and new sources, buying some outright, and splitting others with like-minded dealers.

Which continued on right up until lunch, when we headed over to the Pratt Street Ale House, a restaurant we have not visited in recent years since it is not that close to the usual show location near the Charles Street entrance of the convention center. But this year, for the first time in a decade or more, the show is near the Pratt Street entrance, opening up some new options for us.

And then we returned, viewed more coins with increasingly fewer ‘hits’ and eventually started getting ready for the 4 PM start of dealer set up.  First by getting our bags out of security, and then joining the long queue of dealers at the top of the escalators, and then nearly being crushed when one guy’s DIY cart came apart at the bottom almost causing a cavalcade of dealers (including us) to come crashing down on him.  Fortunately, with the help of some other guys, they hauled him out of the way with seconds to spare, and we all made it to the show entrance unscathed.

Then raced to our well-located table 935, sorted out the cases and lights situation and had ourselves up and running in about 10 minutes, just as some guy vest pocket by walked by and muttered “Everyone is so slow setting up”. Hey, we’re doing the best we can here.

Which turned out to be good enough to sell a bunch of coins and medals to three different people, zip around the floor looking for other cool coins, do some bookkeeping with dealer partners and generally be super productive, working even though the free pizza, beer and wine provided by Whitman since we of course we did not want to spoil our dinner.

And that was a good decision, since we were going to Cinghiale with some dealer friends as we do on Wednesday at pretty much every Baltimore show. Which turned out to be excellent as always, though always kind of a marathon, so we were delighted to finish before the staff started vacuuming the floor as has happened in the past.

Allowing us to get back to our hotel at a reasonably civilized hour and get some rest before we head back on Thursday for more lot viewing followed by a full day on the bourse floor during which the public will be coming in, and with them some pre-arranged meetings to deliver coins we agreed to buy last week, and, very likely, all kinds of other buying and selling we can’t possibly predict.

Whatever it turns out to be, and whatever additional comments are made about my hair, we’ll blog all about all of it right here on Friday AM –

Prologue:

In a Savannah-Baltimore turnaround even the most frequent of travelers would consider to be simply too fast, Team CRO was nevertheless back on the road on Tuesday AM for the quick trip to the Inner Harbor.

But not without a couple of hairy moments, with a crummy weather forecast in Boston nearly derailing our departure, the pilot doing his level best to scare the crap out of us with his urgent turbulence warnings and our eventual landing in a thick fog in which you couldn’t actually see the ground until you were already on it.

But we made it, and then zoomed to our hotel like lightning, checked out the groovy in-room wall art (some of which is featured in the image above), sorted our bags, whipped over to the convention center, took about 20 minutes to find the security room, and then made a bee line to PCGS to turn in in our various show grading as early as possible so we would have a chance to get at least some of it back in time to offer at the show.

After which we intended to view lots at Stack’s-Bowers, but unfortunately we walked in just as they were closing up shop, so we instead headed over to the Monaco Hotel to meet some dealer friends and then eventually all migrated up the street to The Helmand, a fantastic Afghan restaurant here in town that we try to visit every time we come down here.

Then returned to the hotel so we could carefully plan our lot viewing strategy for Wednesday, organize some wholesale activity and generally get ready for what we expect to be, based on the last few weeks, a Baltimore numismatic avalanche of utterly epic proportions.

During which we will blog all about all of it right here in this space every single morning of the show.

Starting tomorrow.