Len Roosmalen
Len has been a collector for 50 years and a full-time coin dealer in the
Madison area for the past 26 years. Len is known nationally and has
purchased and helped assemble some of the finest collections of U.S.
coins.
In addition to rare U.S. coins, Len has particularly excelled in his
service to the error coin collecting community. Len served on the board
of directors of the national club, The National Error Coin Collectors of
America which later became the Combined Organizations of Error
Collectors of America (CONECA)
from 1980 through 1987, and again from
1990 through 1994. Over a period of 12 years, from 1981 to 1993, he
conducted 76 CONECA mail bid auctions of approximately 600 lots each.
As a tireless recruiter, Len won the Kenny Knapp award several times for
enticing at least 25 new members to join. In 1987 and 1990, Len
presided over the club's annual celebration as
Errorama chairman.
For his service to CONECA, he twice received the Lyndon King Award, which
recognizes the individual who has done more for the club than anyone
else in the previous 12 months. Len was an enthusiastic exhibitor of
error coins for many years. He won five consecutive 1st place awards in
the Errors division at the ANA convention from 1977 to 1981, and
exhibited at numerous other shows.
Len assisted several other organizations over the years. He received
the ANA's Glenn Smedley Award in 1992, which recognizes individuals who
have devoted their efforts to the betterment of the association. He
served as President of Midwest Error Coin Collectors. He is a Life
Member of the American Nuismatic
Association, CONECA, and Numismatists
of Wisconsin (NOW), and a past board member of NOW. He was given an
Honorary Life Membership in the
Madison, Wisconsin
Coin Club, and was
the chairman of both the spring and fall Madison coin shows most years
in the 1980's and 1990's.
Until recently Len owned Len's Coins and Stamps, a retail coin store in
Madison. Every two months over a period of 14 years he mailed out an
error coin auction catalog with some of the most unusual errors to be
seen anywhere. In 2003 he sold the business to
James Essence, but still
remains associated with the business (now called "Jim's Coins") in an
advisory capacity passing on his knowledge, humor, and kind spirit to
future generations of numismatists.
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