What is a Colonial Coin? 上市 Deposited

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  • From jlupia2@yahoo.com Thu Jun 07 05:40:52 2007
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    From: John Lupia <jlupia2@yahoo.com>
    Subject: Re: [Colonial Numismatics] Re: What is a Colonial Coin?
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    The 14 year experiment break from EAC with the
    emergence of the independent C-4 has done a fantastic
    job in perpetuating (unknowingly) Very Advanced EAC
    studies, and Very Advanced Colonial Numismatic
    Studies. C-4 deserves a round of applause for the
    enormous task of tackling the bulk of research the
    Large Cent people were not interested in pursuing.

    The grassroots EAC material of the earliest Federal
    Coinages has been the work of C4 members and the bulk
    of what has appeared in the CNL and C4 Newsletter.
    Kudos to all who did that work.

    Time has come to label the material properly
    classifying and categorizing them correctly as Early
    Federal Coinages, and separating them from what truly
    is Colonial Numismatics.

    The question is asked what is a colonial coin . .
    what I think is meant is what qualifies any coin to be
    properly classified as a colonial coin? Just about
    everyone on this list really knows this answer very
    well. All American minted coins minted prior to 1776
    and all coinages circulating in America as currency up
    to 1776. After 1776 all American minted coins are
    Early Federal Coinages and all other non American
    minted coinages circulating are now legally foreign
    currency with US Congress setting the value equal to
    USA value. Also, US colonial minted coins, i.e., coins
    minted in America prior to 1776 are the authentic US
    colonial coins that still circulated regularly up to
    about 1857. So we have Foreign Colonial Coins
    circulating in American, and American US Colonial
    coins. Now, this does not include the Republic of
    Vermont which was an independent nation from 1775 to
    1791. Legally organized and renamed Vermont from
    January 15-June 8,1777. All Vermont colonials remain
    American colonial coins. Vermont became the 14th state
    in 1791.

    Now for some more good news the economic status of all
    Early Federal coin and currency issues will go soaring
    through the glass ceiling once public perception sees
    clarity out of the confusion.

    Up until now colonial numismatics including currency
    has attracted few comparatively as a market share
    within all of American numismatics. Why? People find
    the genre confusing, blurry, a jumbled mess, and fear
    to go there since it comes off too complicated not
    clear or understood what it really is and reluctance
    to invest money into something they do not properly
    understand.

    Once the clarity rings into public perception what
    state coinages really are -- the earliest Federal
    coinages issued by US Congress and ratified through
    each state legislature -- where the Congress was being
    held in that state that year -- simultaneously
    together with paper currency of issue-- pouring
    coinage and paper money into each state treasury and
    into the National Bank of North America, . . .
    collectors and dealers will see values triple, and
    then, finally reach the point of being untouchable.

    So EAC and C4 need to reevaluate and perhaps form a
    third organization of Early Federal Numismatics that
    deals with coin and currency that historically we
    received from the 19th century numismatists who passed
    it onto us through their literature as colonials. I
    suggest naming it the Society of Early American
    Numismatics (SEAN)


    Historical chronology of each group's specialty in
    subject matter

    Colonial Numismatics (C4)
    Early Federal Numismatics (SEAN)
    Early American Standard Issues (EAC)


    John


    --- Joe Schell <joecoin@verizon.net> wrote:

    >
    > Here's a good definition of "Colonial":
    >
    > http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Colonial
    >
    > If you are attempting to determine what coins should
    > be included in a
    > North American Colonial type set, then I would say
    > any locally
    > circulating coin issued by a nation or entity that
    > did not have the
    > North American land that it controlled directly
    > incorporated into its
    > homeland should be included.
    >
    > Canadian tokens, bungtowns, store cards etc.
    >
    > Joe
    >
    >
    >
    >
    > --- In colonial-coins@yahoogroups.com, "Jeff Lipsky"
    > <jhlipsky@...> wrote:
    > >
    > > I have changed the subject line to continue this
    > discussion John Lupia
    > > and others have begun. I have an expansive view of
    > what I consider
    > > Colonial related. That is, I start with every
    > thing in the Red Book
    > > section then go to foreign coins circulating in
    > the colonies. I collect
    > > British from George the third back, French of the
    > period, Spanish
    > > Colonial, and any thing else with a remote chance
    > to have circulated.
    > > From there I collect Hawaiian coinage and I even
    > have a set of
    > > Alaskan "Bingles." The Red Book says "These tokens
    > were issued by the
    > > U.S. Government for for the use of the colonists
    > of the Matanuska
    > > Valley Colonization Project" that's close enough
    > to Colonial for me.
    > > -Jeff Lipsky
    > >
    >
    >
    >


    John N. Lupia, III
    Beachwood, New Jersey 08722 USA; Beirut, Lebanon
    Fax: (732) 349-3910
    http://groups.yahoo.com/group/Roman-Catholic-News/
    God Bless Everyone



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  • 2007-06-07
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