A rare and historic Bechuanaland Border Police canteen token.Token coin with the value of $1.00, issued the Rawley Mine Commissary in Bonanza, Colorado.Coin substitute pogs, used by AAFES at overseas military bases.
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Tokens: US Trade

In the study of numismatics, token coins or tokens are coin-like objects used instead of coins. The field of tokens is part of exonumia. Tokens are used in place of coins and either have a denomination shown or implied by size, color or shape. more...

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They are often made of cheaper materials than the precious metals: aluminum, brass, tin and bakelite or celluloid were commonly used. The key point of difference between a token and an "official coin", or coin of the realm, is that a coin of the realm is issued by a national government and is backed by a national bank, while a token is issued by a private company or individual.

Exonumia

There are many varieties of token coins such as: currency tokens, trade tokens, barter tokens, staff tokens, credit tokens, monopoly tokens, discount tokens etc. Tokens were originally issued by traders from the 1700s in regions when national or local colonial governments did not issue enough small denomination coins for circulation. They were later used to create a monopoly; to pay labour; for discounts (pay in advance, get something free or discounted); or for a multitude of other reasons. In the United States, a well-known type is the Wooden Nickel, a five-cent piece distributed by cities to raise money for their anniversaries in the 1940s to 1960s.

Local stores, saloons and mercantiles, would issue their own tokens as well, spendable only in their own shops. Railways and public transport agencies have used fare tokens for years to sell rides in advance at a discount. Many transport organizations still offer their own tokens for bus and subway services, toll bridges, tunnels, and highways, although the use of computer-readable tickets has replaced these in some areas.

Churches used to give tokens to members passing a religious test prior to the day of communion, then required the token for entry. While mostly Scottish Protestant, some U.S. churches used communion tokens. Generally, these were pewter, often cast by the minister in church-owned molds. Replicas of these tokens have been made available for sale at some churches recently.

Currency tokens

In their purest form currency tokens crossed the boundary of being "trade" tokens when these coins, issued by a company were sanctioned by the local government authority. This was normally a desperate measure resulting from a severe shortage of money or the authority's inability to issue its own coinage. In effect the organisation behind the tokens became the regional bank.

One well-known example of currency tokens is the Strachan and Co, coins which were first issued in 1874 in a remote part of South Africa known as East Griqualand. A partner in Strachan and Co, Charles Brisley, was also the government secretary and obtained official recognition of the coins as currency for that region. The Standard Bank of South Africa notes in its official archives that its branch in Kokstad, East Griqualand's capital, readily exchanged these coins as currency in the 1800s because of the shortage of coinage of the crown in the region. These tokens were South Africa's first widely circulating indigenous currency.

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Scrip Exonumia Winding Gulf Coals W V $4.50 Cripled good luck Token 7 Vintage subway Ice House coin $9.00
B H Hicks 10 Cent Merchandise Token Rowena S Dakota $9.99 Lot of 10 Il Illinois Wooden Nickels Tokens $3.50
Token 1906 New State Capital Harrisburg Penna $5.99 Mills Novelty Co San Francisco 5 Cents In Trade Token $5.99
Max Bros Kaylor South Dakota Hexagon 50 Cents In Trade $6.99 Guatimoc 1911 Moise Tree Growing Token $6.99
Junction Retreat Good For 5 Cents Token $4.95 1961 Dakota Territory Centennial 50 Cents Trade Token $4.99
50 Cent Trade Token Clements Ca Hotel $1.00 Merchant trade Tokens of Colorado The Definitive Guide $21.99
Tokens Iowa 3 $9.99 Detroit Mining Co Token Gordon West Virginia $6.99
Good For Token Kamloops United Dairies $4.99 1852 Professor Johnson New York Adv Token $7.99
1966 Ottawa County Centennial Token $4.99 Hemenway and Moser Good for Token Utah $6.99
Yocum Creek Coal Company Token Evarts Ky $6.99 1966 Luzerne County Pa Souvenir Half Dollar $4.99
Good For Token Schutzen Park Baltimore $14.99 Arctic Ice Co Good For Token Louisville Ky $4.99
Wheeler Coal Co Token Anchor Kentucky $6.99 Valley Dairy Good For Token $4.99
Good For Token Fremad Assoc Minn $5.99 Good For Token Brantford Dairy $7.99
Good For Token Barron Mercantile Co Ks $12.99 Louisville Coal Coke Company Token Wv $4.99
John Babchook Good for Token Michigan $4.49 Dixport Coal Company Token Wv $4.49
Stenackers Good for Token $4.99 Nelsons Goldbergs Good For Token $5.49
Vintage Unknown Gerbers Variety 5c Trade Ad Token 63 $4.99 Vintage Omaha Ne Silver Tap Room 5c Trade Ad Token 61 $4.99
Vintage Omaha Ne Good For 5c Trade Ad Brass Token 51 $4.99 Vintage Omaha Ne John J Novak 5c Trade Ad Token 52 $4.99
Rare Washington Ne Good For 2 1 2c Trade Ad Token 60 $4.99 Vintage Omaha Ne Hempleman 5c Trade Ad Token 54 $4.99
Vintage Omaha Ne Tivoli Buffet 10c Trade Ad Token 55 $4.99 Vintage Omaha Ne Tip Top Licquor Beer Ad Token 58 $4.99
Vintage Omaha Ne Good For 2 1 2c Trade Ad Token 50 $4.99 Vintage Unknown Beer Parlor 5c Trade Ad Token 62 $4.99
Vintage Omaha Ne Tech High 2 1 2c Trade Token 59 $4.99 Vintage Omaha Ne White House Inn 5c Ad Token 56 $4.99
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Prices current as of last update, 11/20/08 6:29am.


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