1863 Story & Southworth token?

Discussion in 'US Coins Forum' started by Allan Ashford, Jun 13, 2025 at 5:21 AM.

  1. Allan Ashford

    Allan Ashford Member

    C7112A47-6953-4548-B409-45051AA80EB6.jpeg E376C1FD-AE86-4C04-ADA9-6C35F66F792D.jpeg Not sure if this is anything, again out of the collection, I am guessing a token of some kind but not sure if it’s something people would be interested in?

    Many thanks in advance

    Allan
     
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  3. longnine009

    longnine009 Darwin has to eat too. Supporter

    I don't collect Civil War tokens but that's what it looks like to me.
     
  4. Heavymetal

    Heavymetal Supporter! Supporter

  5. SensibleSal66

    SensibleSal66 U.S Casual Collector / Error Collector

    Does anyone, maybe someone who lived in the day, know how exactly these were used? Like modern coins from Say Big Y Supermarket??
    Always want to find one Metal Detecting..... 5d4b3caf935075e3f7b835aa_thought-leadership-ohmconnect-t-o-u-rates-emoji.png
     
  6. Allan Ashford

    Allan Ashford Member


    Many thanks, it points me in the right direction!
     
    longnine009 likes this.
  7. johnmilton

    johnmilton Well-Known Member

    The Story and Southworth Grocery store issued many varieties of Civil War tokens. The Fuld number on this one is NY 630-BV 8a. It is rated as an R-6 variety, estimated 21 to 76 known. I'm not sure how important that is given the the merchant is not that rare. The inidvidual die numbers are 30460/1218. "1218" in the stock die with the eagle atop the shield on the reverse.
     
  8. Allan Ashford

    Allan Ashford Member


    Fantastic! appreciate the time and your knowledge
     
  9. Collecting Nut

    Collecting Nut Borderline Hoarder

    Store tokens like this were handed out by the store and could be redeemed at a later day. Similar to todays store coupons.
     
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  10. johnmilton

    johnmilton Well-Known Member

    The might be 100 varieties of Story and Southworth tokens in the current CWT Store Card Book. I'm not going to take the time to count them all.

    According the notes on this merchant. "this series was a playground for making numismatic rarities." They were made by and for the American Numismatic Society in New York City after the Civil War by token and die maker, Emil Sigel. The people involved included Edward Groh, Joseph N. T. Levick and others.

    You see this for quite a few CWTs which were made in various metals and die combinations (mulings) for collectors. I am not impressed by these "made up" rarities even though they are from the 19th century. I prefer tokens that were made for use commerce.
     
    Neal, ksparrow, KBBPLL and 2 others like this.
  11. lordmarcovan

    lordmarcovan 48-year collector Moderator

    Neat Civil War storecard. I am unfamiliar with the type, but I see @johnmilton has already provided a sketch of the relevant info.
     
  12. KBBPLL

    KBBPLL Well-Known Member

    Very interesting and it seems kind of sleazy. More of a promotional item than something "good for" actual commerce.
     
  13. johnmilton

    johnmilton Well-Known Member

    Some collectors are fascinated with rarity, even when it’s phony and manufactured. Look at the excitement the mint has created with the “rare hallmark” nonsense. I have zero interest in spending money on such things.
     
    Neal likes this.
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