Thoughts? US Occupation of Phillipines

Discussion in 'Coin Chat' started by CheetahCats, Mar 14, 2010.

  1. CheetahCats

    CheetahCats Colonial & Early American

    I'm curious to know how folks classify Phillipine coinage in their albums during U.S. colonialism.

    As U.S. or as foreign?
     
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  3. cerdsalicious

    cerdsalicious BigShot

    I ahve my own little section for it called Occupation coins
    However I must say there were some from the philipines that were stunning during the occupation, unfortunately I dont own many, and those that I do are in circulated g-vg condition.
     
  4. mlmummert

    mlmummert Junior Member

    You could go either way on that one. I personally would tend to consider it American issue but others may feel differently.

    Btw, I would not call the period of US control of the Phillipines an "occupation" It was a territory of the US acquired from Spain by a signed treaty. That said, I'm not sure what the original legal framework was that allowed Spain to assume control of the place originally. The Japanese on the other hand invaded and occupied the Phillipines and they issued "occupation currency" although it was in paper form only; they didn't issue any coins. Of course after independence then it became clearly a separate issue.
     
  5. Ardatirion

    Ardatirion Où est mon poisson

    What does it take for a coin to be considered American? Is it not enough that it be struck at a US mint and say UNITED STATES OF AMERICA on it?
     
  6. chip

    chip Novice collector

    I put mine in my foreign coins album, I only have three, two of the older ww2 era coins and one of the newer issues.
     
  7. CheetahCats

    CheetahCats Colonial & Early American

    Tally:
    1 - Occupation Category
    2 - U.S. Category
    1 - Foreign Catagory

    Thus far I have been keeping them in my U.S. albums. However, that said, I've seen them in a variety of categories at shows and at dealer shops. Today's show got me to thinking because every exhibitor had their Phillipine coins (U.S.) in foreign albums or boxes.

    mlmummert -> I chose 'occupation' as the operative word because that's how my Filipino friends refer to that time of their history... certainly wasn't my objective to offend anyone.
     
  8. cerdsalicious

    cerdsalicious BigShot


    I know all my filipino friends call it an occupation, so I will stick to that operative word.
     
  9. LewR

    LewR Junior Member

    I'll tell you, I have a 5 peso note printed during the Japanese occupation and it looks like an American $5 bill - amazing ....
    (Top note)
     

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  10. CheetahCats

    CheetahCats Colonial & Early American

    Wow! That is amazing! Talk about the cut & paste job they did with a sharp X-acto knife! :goofer:
     
  11. fretboard

    fretboard Defender of Old Coinage!

    I have maybe 10 to 15 various Phillipine coins and I keep them all in my world coins binder. They are separate from my US coins only because they all say the Phillipines or Filipinas on them. I know they were made in the US, but they're not our coins and they were never spent here. I still really like the General MacArthur half dollar though. :)
     

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  12. LewR

    LewR Junior Member

    I hope this comes out better:
     

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  13. illini420

    illini420 1909 Collector

    They are U.S. coins...

    They say UNITED STATES OF AMERICA on them...

    They were made largely made in U.S. cities (Philadelphia and San Francisco)...

    The Philippines were a U.S. Territory at the time...

    That's enough for me to like them and to collect a few :)

    Just think about it for a second... When California secedes from the U.S. at some point in the future and re-establishes the Bear Flag Republic as an independent nation would coins collectors declare that the 2005 CA State Quarters suddenly stop being U.S. coins??? NO WAY!!!!

    [​IMG]

    [​IMG]
     
  14. cerdsalicious

    cerdsalicious BigShot

    The one peso is my favorite, unfortunately I cant find them around here, and the ones I do are very low grade.
     
  15. CheetahCats

    CheetahCats Colonial & Early American

    Thanks folks. I believe I obtained enough for my purposes. :smile

    I've established subcategories in my albums and in my software that are denoted as "Phillipines -> 'U.S. Commonwealth Issues'" and "Phillipines -> 'Under U.S. Sovereignty'".

    Beyond that, I'll defer to you guys to duel out the deeper 'brass tacks' specifics amongst yourselves! :whistle:

    Thanks again!
     
  16. Dollar1948

    Dollar1948 New Member

    Interesting thread, and interesting looking coins. That must be Mt. Pinatubo (sic) on it.
    Im glad the thread kept civil, as it did start to turn into a political and history lesson
     
  17. chrisild

    chrisild Coin Collector

    Wouldn't that be quite a different case? Please correct me if I'm wrong, but the "American Philippines" coins have never been legal tender in the US, I think. It makes sense to collect them even if one focuses on US coinage. But people who collect coins from various countries in, say, boxes should in my opinion have them in the Asia or Philippines box, not the North America or USA box.

    Similarly, where should a coin "sit" that says Republica Portuguesa? Sure, Portugal. But what if the other side says Angola, India or Macau?

    Christian
     
  18. kanga

    kanga 65 Year Collector

    Maybe looking at the question from the perspective of our "sister" hobby (philatelics) will help.
    If you purchase what is arguably the best album for US stamps (Scott's National), you will end up with pages for all the territorial issues.
    Guam, Cuba, Puerto Rico and the Philippines are among those.
    BUT only for the period they were under US administration.

    Confusing the analogy is the fact that these stamps were US stamps overprinted with the territory's name.
    That would be loosely equivalent to using a punch to put the territory's name on US coins. That obviously didn't occur.

    Also in the case of the Philippines the US issued stamps specifically designed for the period of the US administration AND designed specifically for them, i.e., not overprinted US stamps.
    This would be a MUCH closer concept to the Philippine coins that were the topic of this thread.

    But the bottom line is decide for yourself.
     
  19. Mat

    Mat Ancient Coincoholic

    I got them all mainly because I loved the design of them. I just have them in air-tites though. I pretty much view them and foreign though.
     
  20. willieboyd2

    willieboyd2 First Class Poster

    The "Red Book" or "A Guide Book of United States Coins" lists them so they are American.

    :)
     
  21. illini420

    illini420 1909 Collector


    Makes sense... definitely not a yes or no answer of where to categorize these coins!
     
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