NGC MS-64 Our Little Monitor Civil War token.

Discussion in 'Coin Chat' started by Sallent, Jun 27, 2026 at 12:25 PM.

  1. Sallent

    Sallent Live long and prosper

    I've always wanted one of this type, and I've been hunting for a decent one for a while. Recently picked this one up....

    ZomboDroid_26062026223116.jpg

    It's got a fairly interesting and dynamic patina, which is always fun. I'm a big fan of ships on coins, and having the Monitor ironclad on it is so freaking cool.

    I love the fact that the ship is not static....there's waves in the water, smoke from the chimney, and smoke from the guns, and you can see which way the ship is moving and wind blowing from the way the smoke is moving and flag is waving. Such attention to detail in such a little coin.

    Feel free to share your civil war tokens in this thread.
     
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  3. philologus_1

    philologus_1 Supporter! Supporter

    Yours is WAY cooler!!! But I do have something quasi-similar: A copper Civil War-era exonumia 'coin' from Whitehall, NY, produced between 1861-1865, which (as I'm sure you know) were the years of the war. I bought it due to a confluence of my interest in coins, Civil War history, and Atherton family genealogy.

    upload_2026-6-27_12-31-43.png

    Technically it is a "Fuld 985a" Civil War Store Card Token.

    These merchant tokens were produced as a direct result of a high-demand and low-supply of small US coinage.
     
  4. Randy Abercrombie

    Randy Abercrombie Supporter! Supporter

    That is the nicest Monitor token I have ever seen..... I made the deep south my home after I left the Army and one of the reasons (besides southern belles) was the fascination that I had for the history here. I have accumulated my fair share of civil war tokens over the years, but this one is my all time favorite. "Shoot Him On The Spoot".... Always wondered what became of the die-sinker after this blunder.

    spoot1.jpg spoot2.jpg
     
  5. johnmilton

    johnmilton Well-Known Member

    Here is a run of Monitor Civil War Token varieties.

    237 423 Mon All.jpg

    This is an "Indiana Primitive." Henry Higgins, who was optometrist, maker of barometers and a general jack of all trades, made these pieces by copying the variety shown above. All Indiana Primitive tokens are scarce to rare.

    These tokens are called "primitives" because of the hand made dies Higgins created which included wild lettering, horns and flurishes.

    238 402 b Mon All.jpg 238 405 Mon IP All.jpg

    This is the second version of the tokens made by the Scoville Company in Connecticut.

    239 422 Mon All.jpg

    These Monitor dies were made by Charles Hörter who was located in New York City.

    240 337 Mon All.jpg 241 336 Mon All.jpg
     
  6. longarm

    longarm Well-Known Member

  7. Sallent

    Sallent Live long and prosper

    I love them all. Fantastic collection.
     
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  8. Sallent

    Sallent Live long and prosper

    That's a fun spelling error. Love it.
     
  9. fretboard

    fretboard Defender of Old Coinage!

    Yep our little monitor token has always been one of the most popular Civil War tokens ever. I only have a couple CWT's and here they are! :D

    11268606a.png 11268606b.png 11261206b.jpg 11261206f.jpg
     
  10. Tall Paul

    Tall Paul Supporter! Supporter

    Here is my contribution. Fuld240/337a MS-65 BN

    [​IMG]
     
  11. Tall Paul

    Tall Paul Supporter! Supporter

    Here is my contribution. Fuld240/337a MS-65 BN

    [​IMG]
     
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  12. Tall Paul

    Tall Paul Supporter! Supporter

    Sorry for the double post. CT is very very slow and I hit reply twice.
     
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  13. johnmilton

    johnmilton Well-Known Member

    Yes, I noted that yesterday. I mostly gave up after “the electric dog chased his tail for too long.”
     
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  14. johnmilton

    johnmilton Well-Known Member

    I put those together when I was a dealer. The Indiana Primitives have always been elusive and relatively expensive. but the others are quite common and increasingly popular.

    There are many die combinations and metals. As usual, I only went for the various obverse dies.
     
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  15. KBBPLL

    KBBPLL Well-Known Member

    Glad I’m not the only one. Seems to be fixed now, but gosh it was painful for a few days there.
     

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