$1 brown seal short snorter hawaii overstamp 1935a

Discussion in 'Paper Money' started by wlwhittier, Jan 8, 2013.

  1. wlwhittier

    wlwhittier Peripheral Member

    I was pawing through Dad's personal effects with his widow on Sunday, and came across this WWII Short Snorter.

    P1060202.jpg P1060205.jpg

    It was folded in quarters, and held with a paper clip between two "Free New Buick" drawing tickets dated October 29, 1954; crummy cardboard that probably resulted in the pronounced stain on the left side of the face.

    I will attempt to list all the signatures, dates, etc., when I get a Round Tuit.

    More pics on demand, including of the Buick giveaway tickets.

    Your comments, gentlemen?
     
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  3. This is pretty awesome! Especially with all of the signatures and dates - what a piece of history! :smile Do you recognize any of the names? Friends of your father's perhaps?
     
  4. green18

    green18 Unknown member Sweet on Commemorative Coins

    Capital bit of history........
     
  5. kookoox10

    kookoox10 ANA #3168546

    Hey Ken, I think I see your autograph on there j/k :D
     
  6. green18

    green18 Unknown member Sweet on Commemorative Coins

    LOL......Another story, another thread.......:)
     
  7. wlwhittier

    wlwhittier Peripheral Member

    More likely friends of his brother Leonard, who served in the Pacific during the war as an armorer in the Air Corps.

    The names are barely legible, and unfamiliar to me. The dates seem to cover over a year.

    I'll do a bit of sleuthing, but don't expect to find anything spectacular.
     
  8. gsalexan

    gsalexan Intaglio aficionado

    Anyone know how the term "short snorter" originated?
     
  9. LFCfan

    LFCfan Member

    Awesome piece of history, I like these as I have an interest in WWII and coins/bills

    gsalexan,
    term is from Alaskan bush pilots, snorter = mixed drink , short = less than full, so a quick drink before you jump in your plane. Which doesn't seem a great idea to me..
     
  10. wlwhittier

    wlwhittier Peripheral Member

    Wikipedia has an entry for Short Snorter, and their take is that a snort was a shot or a drink of alcoholic beverage...it's a good read, and has a few famous examples.
     
  11. wlwhittier

    wlwhittier Peripheral Member

    I have another short snorter around here somewhere, which is a 'chain' of several bills end-taped or glued together. I'll certainly post it here, if I ever come across it.

    Also I have a stack of foreign banknotes from the same uncle, and I'll sort through them for anything old or of unusual nature and post those pretty soon.
     
  12. green18

    green18 Unknown member Sweet on Commemorative Coins

    When you think of it, young men drawn up in war, never knowing when when their last moment might appear, signing notes for posterity. These men never knew if they were coming back from the last mission. A bit of mortality for some who may have fallen.........
     
  13. gsalexan

    gsalexan Intaglio aficionado

    Interesting! But I'm not clear on how this relates to the signed note. Did each signature represent someone the note owner had a drink with?
     
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