Does anyone know anything about this? 100 years on the road Ford

Discussion in 'Coin Chat' started by MMiller750, Apr 13, 2016.

  1. MMiller750

    MMiller750 Active Member

    Good evening everyone,

    I recently acquired this in a larger purchase I made and I have no idea what this is. On the front it reads "100 Years on the Road with Ford" and has six coins. On the coins there is a 1996 Taurus, 1964 Mustang, 1909 Model T, 1903 Model A, 1955 Thunderbird, and Henry Ford's 1896 quadricycle. On the back it says "Republic of the Marshall Islands" "$5" and "Jepilpilin Ke Ejukaan". I don't know anything about this or value-wise, all I could find was a completed listing for one of them not all 6 on Ebay which leads me to believe they may be silver? I could be wrong though, any input is appreciated.
     

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  3. paddyman98

    paddyman98 I'm a professional expert in specializing! Supporter

    The Numista website lists all of them. Here is one - Copper Nickel composition.. not Silver
    copper nickel.JPG
     
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  4. paddyman98

    paddyman98 I'm a professional expert in specializing! Supporter

  5. MMiller750

    MMiller750 Active Member

    Thanks!! That is very helpful, although a little bit disappointing not silver. I noticed it said that is pretty rare, explains why I have never seen this. Is it worth the $30 FV?
     
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  6. paddyman98

    paddyman98 I'm a professional expert in specializing! Supporter

    Sure.. if you plan to visit he Marshall Islands ;)
    islands.JPG
    (I want to share this image with you from the internet)
     
  7. Conder101

    Conder101 Numismatist

    Actually no. Although they are "legal tender" there they can't be spent and the fee to "exchange" them pretty much equals the face value. Back in the early days of the Marshall Islands coinage a couple of guy bought up a bunch of them for less than face value and then tried to take them to the Marshall Islands and exchange them. They got put in jail instead. I believe the charge was trying to defraud the government. The government had licensed a private firm to make the coins and sell them to collectors for a small royalty per coin. They never expected them to come back for redemption and redeeming them would cost the government more than they received in royalties. That was when they passed the exchange restrictions and fees to keep people from trying to exchange them.

    They are in effect Non-Circulating Non-Legal Tender.
     
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  8. Lon Chaney

    Lon Chaney Well-Known Member

    Source please?
     
  9. Conder101

    Conder101 Numismatist

    Articles were published in world coin news, I believe early 90's, can't give you the exact dates.
     
  10. Lon Chaney

    Lon Chaney Well-Known Member

    This is the part I find hard to believe:
    "They got put in jail instead. I believe the chargewas trying to defraud the government."
    Especially if they passed the restrictions as a result.
     
  11. Conder101

    Conder101 Numismatist

    They didn't STAY in jail and the charges were eventually dropped. This was before they put the redemption restrictions on the coins. (They had never expected anyone to ever show up and actually try to redeem a bunch of them.)
     
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