What is a Colonial Coin? Público Deposited

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  • From joecoin@verizon.net Fri Jun 08 18:13:15 2007
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    From: "Joe Schell" <joecoin@verizon.net>
    Subject: [Colonial Numismatics] Re: What is a Colonial Coin?
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    Here's another coin to add to the list:

    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Maine_Penny



    --- In colonial-coins@yahoogroups.com, "palmers4@..." <palmers4@...>
    wrote:
    >
    > John, You are talking AFTER the Confederation! Please keep up!<S> David
    >=20
    > Original Message:
    > -----------------
    > From: John Louis johnwlouis@...
    > Date: Fri, 8 Jun 2007 12:07:12 -0400
    > To: colonial-coins@yahoogroups.com
    > Subject: Re: [Colonial Numismatics] Re: What is a Colonial Coin?
    >=20
    >=20
    > I thought the Vikings settled in Minnesota!
    > jwl
    >=20
    > ----- Original Message -----=20
    > From: Oliver D. Hoover=20
    > To: colonial-coins@yahoogroups.com=20
    > Sent: Friday, June 08, 2007 10:13 AM
    > Subject: Re: [Colonial Numismatics] Re: What is a Colonial Coin?
    >=20
    >=20
    > Dan and David,
    >=20
    > I had forgotten about the Vikings. I suppose some argument could be=20
    > made for the Vineland settlement as a medieval colonial experiment,=20
    > but I don't know what the status of Vineland was vis-a-vis the=20
    > Scandinavian kings. There is nothing colonial about the Asian=20
    > migrations into North America in the Prehistoric period.
    >=20
    > David, No mints, but I think that there was supposed to have been a=20
    > Viking coin find from Vineland. I could be mistaken though.
    >=20
    > Oliver
    >=20
    > On 7-Jun-07, at 10:48 PM, palmers4@... wrote:
    >=20
    > > It must be because we have no evidence of a mint being set up by=20
    > > either the
    > > Asian invasion, or the Vikings. David
    > >
    > > Original Message:
    > > -----------------
    > > From: Freidus, Daniel freidus@...
    > > Date: Thu, 7 Jun 2007 22:35:59 -0400
    > > To: colonial-coins@yahoogroups.com
    > > Subject: RE: [Colonial Numismatics] Re: What is a Colonial Coin?
    > >
    > >
    > > Yes, Oliver, I don't recall ever having seen the term 'colonial'=20
    > > used to
    > > refer to any activity in North America earlier than 1492 (but I=20
    > > haven't
    > > read much about the Viking invasion). I was also under the=20
    > > impression that
    > > crossing the Bering strait was probably a long enough and difficult=20
    > > enough
    > > journey that those doing it were leaving behind their old land, not=20
    > > staying
    > > in touch.
    > >
    > > Dan
    > >
    > >
    > > -----Original Message-----
    > > From: colonial-coins@yahoogroups.com on behalf of Oliver D. Hoover
    > > Sent: Thu 6/7/2007 9:05 PM
    > > To: colonial-coins@yahoogroups.com
    > > Subject: Re: [Colonial Numismatics] Re: What is a Colonial Coin?
    > >
    > > Jim,
    > >
    > > I would be interested to know who uses the term "Colonial" to refer
    > > to the migrants from the Asian continent to North America in the
    > > Prehistoric period who later became the Native peoples of the
    > > Americas. This seems like quite a stretch as the prehistoric peoples
    > > who crossed the Bering Strait are not likely to have maintained
    > > political and economic ties with their Asian homeland. Is not
    > > dependence on the Mother Country a colonial requirement by
    definition?
    > >
    > > Oliver
    > >
    > > On 7-Jun-07, at 2:17 PM, JCSpilman/iMAC/HOME wrote:
    > >
    > >> Dan --
    > >> The categorization of time spans and terminology is neatly spelled
    > >> out in Dr. Jordan's Notre Dame "Colonial" (Early American)
    > >> website. I find nothing in his systemization to object to. Draw
    > >> this categorization as an organization chart and you will find that
    > >> it is, generally, all inclusive,
    > >>
    > >> The misnomer "colonial" has long been recognized as an "era" prior
    > >> to the Paris Treaty of 1783 and even extends back in time to man's
    > >> first entry into the North American continent (from Asia).
    > >> Colonial is a very broad categorization indicating only a Colony of
    > >> some remote Mother Country, it may, or may not, extend to several
    > >> intervals of time, as well as changes between one Mother Country
    > >> and some other.
    > >>
    > >> Remember the political phrase "Keep it simple, stupid" <bg>
    > >>
    > >> Jim/CNLF
    > >>
    > >> =3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=
    =3D=3D=3D=3D=3D
    > >>
    > >> "Freidus, Daniel" wrote:
    > >>> I've seen many historians use dates other than 1776 to divide
    > >>> eras. It's not uncommon to see 1764-1783 or 1789 listed as the
    > >>> Revolutionary period. Do we put Continental currency from 1775 in
    > >>> a different category than that from 1776 (which still said "United
    > >>> Colonies") or that from, say, 1778 (by which time it said "United
    > >>> States")?For most purposes, historians use either 1783 or 1789 as
    > >>> the beginning of the next phase for our nation <Well, most of
    > >>> ours, Oliver ;) >. I generally prefer 1789 because I see the
    > >>> ratification as the end of the process of declaring independence
    > >>> (the Bill of Rights was tweaking, even if they are quite
    > >>> important). For coinage, I think pre-1764, 1764-1789, and
    > >>> post-1789 work quite well. For paper money and many fiscal issues
    > >>> you could argue that the Revolutionary period goes on a bit beyond
    > >>> 1789 but I don't think that diminishes the usefulness of seeing
    > >>> early American numismatics as 3 eras: Colonial, Revolutionary, and
    > >>> Federal.
    > >>> Just because Fugios were made for the federal government doesn't
    > >>> put them in the Federal era. They were an experiment by a
    > >>> government still being formed. Large cents are different (and
    > >>> that's why I no longer collect them.).
    > >>>
    > >>> Dan
    > >>>
    > >>> From:colonial-coins@yahoogroups.com [mailto:colonial-
    > >>> coins@yahoogroups.com] On Behalf Of John N. Lupia
    > >>>
    > >>> Sent: Thursday, June 07, 2007 12:16 PM
    > >>> To:colonial-coins@yahoogroups.com
    > >>> Subject: [Colonial Numismatics] Re: What is a Colonial Coin?
    > >>> Hi Ray:
    > >>> I think you misread me. I agree the name C4 is here to stay. The
    > >>> distinction I am making is a more precise definition of the
    scope of
    > >>> the subject matter of colonial numismatics under the banner of C4.
    > >>>
    > >>> To continue keeping Early Federal Coinage minted 1776-1792
    under the
    > >>> C4 banner will continue the confusion, lack of clarity, and the
    > >>> perception of the whole as a jumbled mess.
    > >>>
    > >>> I realize your affections for Early Federal coinages,
    especially New
    > >>> Jersey cents, wants you to keep them as C4 subject matter. But for
    > >>> the
    > >>> sake of the subject matter as well as for the good of the larger
    > >>> collecting community, the American community at large,
    newcomers to
    > >>> the field, students, and so on, to put them under the proper
    > >>> banner is
    > >>> for a greater good than could ever be accomplished by keeping the
    > >>> status quo.
    > >>>
    > >>> Most of us already are members of more than one numismatic=20
    > >>> society or
    > >>> association, so here is one more for us to join.
    > >>>
    > >>> EAC wont take the subject matter back as we all suspect since they
    > >>> have specialized so intensely on Early US cents and half cents
    > >>> 1793-1857 showing signs of no other interest.
    > >>>
    > >>> But, I think my purpose goes way beyond the things mentioned here.
    > >>> These Early Federal coinages we all love and have such a
    fascination
    > >>> and interest in are not properly focused as Federal coinages and
    > >>> obviously they cannot be Pre-Mint.
    > >>>
    > >>> We need to shatter the myth that the US Mint at Philadelphia
    > >>> completed
    > >>> by September 7, 1792 is the only real authentic mint of record as
    > >>> defined by Frank Stewart in 1924. It appears not even to have been
    > >>> the
    > >>> first built with US government funds and operated by US government
    > >>> staff. Robert Morris seems to have been the one under the
    > >>> direction of
    > >>> Congress to have done that.
    > >>>
    > >>> The early government wasted no time making plates to print paper
    > >>> money
    > >>> and strike coinages even in 1776, also having set up a US
    > >>> treasury, US
    > >>> Federal Reserve Depositories (Boston being one of the first), The
    > >>> Nnational Bank system, and state charters for banks.
    > >>>
    > >>> A decade before the Philadelphia Mint, Robert Morris set up the=20
    > >>> first
    > >>> bureau of engraving and mint in 1782, that has now since
    disappeared
    > >>> without a trace, also probably located in NJ or in or near PA.
    > >>>
    > >>> But, after Morris' Mint dissolved (for reasons yet unclear to me)=20
    > >>> the
    > >>> US Mint became itinerant just as the US Congress was itinerant
    until
    > >>> it settled down in a physical building in the District of
    > >>> Columbia . .
    > >>> . and the Mint also after July 18, 1792 when the government=20
    > >>> purchased
    > >>> lot 37 and 39 North Seventh Street and 631 Filbert Street,
    > >>> Philadelphia.
    > >>>
    > >>> It seems as though the early nascent government saw a more
    practical
    > >>> application in being itinerant at that time, not only with
    Congress
    > >>> but with the branch of the US Treasury outsourcing US Mints and
    > >>> coiners, probably explaining why they dissolved what Morris had
    > >>> started for Congress in 1782.
    > >>>
    > >>> As you well know the US Mint formed by private contractors was
    very
    > >>> functional in Rahway and Morristown, NJ, 15 years before David
    > >>> Rittenhouse ran the new one at Philadelphia. In fact the old
    Rahway
    > >>> coin press was sold to the new plant by the old coiner's widow.
    > >>>
    > >>> The other Early Federal Mints coined in New York, also, an outside
    > >>> contractor at Vermont, etc. These were all necessarily US Federal
    > >>> Mints, albeit though outsourced under contract coiners who used=20
    > >>> their
    > >>> own equipment and physical plants. Since the executive government=20
    > >>> had
    > >>> already empowered Congress with the exclusive right to coin, ipso
    > >>> facto, all the post 1776 American minted coins are Early Federal
    > >>> issues, just as the paper money was too.
    > >>>
    > >>> New Jersey coppers are US coinage struck at the Early Federal
    > >>> outsourced Mints located in Rahway and Morristown, NJ. They were
    > >>> private contractors, coiners hired by the state legislature acting
    > >>> under the direction and guidance of the US Congress -- who
    alone had
    > >>> exclusive executive authority to order coinage with supreme
    control
    > >>> over it.
    > >>>
    > >>> Keeping this under the banner of C4 is not only clouding the
    issues
    > >>> but keeping it out of focus and not doing the subject matter the
    > >>> justice it rightly deserves.
    > >>>
    > >>> American History textbooks do not even have it straight. The Red=20
    > >>> Book
    > >>> is so messed up it contributes to the chaos and status quo.
    > >>>
    > >>> I would like to either be on the board of editors to revamp
    the Red
    > >>> Book or else find a publisher willing to make a new US Coin Guide
    > >>> Book, or else beyond that, find others willing to start-up a new
    > >>> company and produce it ourselves.
    > >>>
    > >>> C4 is here to stay, Ray. Nobody wants to see C4 do anything but
    > >>> flourish -- but focused on its proper subject matter, not that
    which
    > >>> is not part of it at all.
    > >>>
    > >>> In order for our understanding and appreciation of Early Federal
    > >>> history, financing, banking, and so on to advance in our minds and
    > >>> hearts C4 is surely big enough to let it go off on its own; like a
    > >>> mature parent who sees its child grown big enough to go out
    into the
    > >>> world and make it independently.
    > >>>
    > >>> For the good of US Economic History I propose that a new
    Society of
    > >>> Early American Numismatics (SEAN) focuses on research of coins,
    > >>> medals
    > >>> and paper money issued from 1776 until 1793, as a new and=20
    > >>> independent
    > >>> organization to advance the science of Early American Federal
    > >>> Numismatics.
    > >>>
    > >>> Keep smiling,
    > >>> John
    > >>>
    > >>> --- In colonial-coins@yahoogroups.com, Ray Williams <njraywms@>
    > >>> wrote:
    > >>>>
    > >>>> That was well thought out John. I believe the C4 name is here to
    > >>> stay, even if it may be technically inaccurate in many
    instances. I
    > >>> think that "Pre-Federal" or "Pre-Mint" more accurately describes=20
    > >>> what
    > >>> we collect and the areas in which we specialize. There are some=20
    > >>> coins
    > >>> that we include out of tradition, that don't fit the parameters of
    > >>> "Pre-Federal" or "Pre-Mint", but that's okay. Some even call thos
    > >>> Canadian things made by Blacksmiths as "Colonial"! <BG> But they
    > >>> were colonial for Canada... just not 18th Century products.
    This is
    > >>> always an interesting topic, especially when I can get David
    Palmer
    > >>> involved somehow... <s>
    > >>>> Ray
    > >>>>
    > >>>>
    > >>>> ----- Original Message -----
    > >>>> From: John Lupia
    > >>>> To: colonial-coins@yahoogroups.com
    > >>>> Sent: Thursday, June 07, 2007 8:40 AM
    > >>>> Subject: Re: [Colonial Numismatics] Re: What is a Colonial Coin?
    > >>>>
    > >>>>
    > >>>> 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@> 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 Jersey08722USA;Beirut, Lebanon
    > >>>> Fax: (732) 349-3910
    > >>>> http://groups.yahoo.com/group/Roman-Catholic-News/
    > >>>> God Bless Everyone
    > >>>>
    > >>>> __________________________________________________________
    > >>>> Don't pick lemons.
    > >>>> See all the new 2007 cars at Yahoo! Autos.
    > >>>> http://autos.yahoo.com/new_cars.html
    > >>>>
    > >>>
    > >>
    > >
    > >
    > >
    > >
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    > >
    > >
    > >
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  • 2007-06-08
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  • 1

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