MINT TOKENS Público Deposited

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  • The E-Sylum: Volume 7, Number 4, January 25, 2004, Article 11

    MINT TOKENS

    Last week we asked, "Do many mints around the world use
    ... tokens or scrip within their walls? David Lange writes:
    "I have a collection of three brass tokens denominated at 5, 10
    and 25 cents that formerly were used by employees of the San
    Francisco Mint. They date from the 1980s and are no longer
    used, the mint having since switched to a debit-card system to
    avoid any stray metal finding its way into coin presses.

    Unfortunately, the tokens don't indicate that they were
    intended for the mint. In fact, they're completely generic and
    were probably used at other facilities, too. I know they were
    ex San Francisco Mint only because they were given to me
    by an employee at the time."

    Scott Semans writes: I've handled metal canteen (cafeteria)
    tokens for Shanghai (China) and both Calcutta and Bombay
    (India) Mints. In fact, there are at least two series for
    Calcutta. The India are guesstimated at 1960s-80s while the
    Shanghai are probably 1980s-90s. The Indian tokens carry
    denominations while the Chinese seem to be good-fors as
    one has a legend translating as "vegetable".

URL de origen Fecha de publicación
  • 2004-01-25
Volumen
  • 7

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Autor NNP