'LIST MEDAL' 上市 Deposited
NUMISMATIC TERM OF THE WEEK
The E-Sylum: Volume 6, Number 51, November 30, 2003, Article 16
NUMISMATIC TERM OF THE WEEK: 'LIST MEDAL'
Dick Johnson writes: "Your quotation of Chief Engraver
Gilroy Roberts in his phone conversations with Director of
the Mint Eva Adams in regards to selecting Kennedy?s portrait
for the half dollar in last week?s E-Sylum included the term
?list medal.? In my research I have learned that mint officials
and numismatists had used the term ?list medal? for those
medals struck by the Philadelphia Mint and offered for sale
to the public for virtually the entire 20th century.I tried to trace the term back into the 19th century without
much luck, however. A few U.S. branch mints struck medals
for their opening (and some recent minimedals), but all U.S.
government medals are struck by the Philadelphia Mint. All
these medals are ?National Medals? (a term defined in the
U.S. Code really making it official). But not all National
Medals are List Medals -- not all were offered for sale to
the public.Of the 573 (National) medals listed by Bob Julian in his
monumental book, ?Medals of the United States Mint, The
First Century, 1792-1892,? only 123 are List Medals.
[Nota bene: I constantly admire this book and Julian?s effort
? I rank it second only to ?Breen?s Encyclopedia of Colonial
and U.S. Coins? as the most well-researched and important
American numismatic books ? ever!]Some of these mint medals were award medals, as you might
expect. However, some of these National Medals were also
Private Medals. We believe the first medals struck by the
fledgling Philadelphia Mint in 1792 was for Ricketts Circus;
this was a private medal. The Philadelphia Mint struck school
medals, expo medals and even a wedding medal. These
were Private Medals ? not List Medals. [Reason for these
was that the equipment for striking large medals did not
exist in America outside the mint. Such medals had to be
struck at the Philadelphia Mint, or in Europe.]Washington medals struck by the Philadelphia Mint began
selling prior to the Civil War, with Lincoln medals shortly after.
Thus the mint began offering medals for sale to the public with
a little more push. Thus the concept of list medals may exist
back to 1861 [Julian concurs]. But the term is derived from
offering these medals for sale ? from a List.I obtained my first U.S. Mint Medal Lists after World War II
when I started buying proof sets from the mint and asked
what else they had for sale. These were mimeographed sheets
of short size (not 8 ½ x 11, but a half-inch shorter both ways
? this size saved the government money ? isn?t that a hoot?).
I have lost these sheets over the years (as probably most
everyone else because of their ephemeral nature).However, I would like to ask E-Sylum readers to search their
files for any of these U.S. Mint sheets offering List Medals for
sale. I would like to learn of the earliest. Does such a 19th
century list exist? (You can date them by the last presidential
medal offered.) How did the Mint publicize these offerings
back as far as the 1860s?"- 2003-11-30
- 6