Anyone Have any info on this?

Discussion in 'Coin Chat' started by mdunn66, Jun 14, 2010.

  1. 19Lyds

    19Lyds Member of the United States of Confusion

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  3. mralexanderb

    mralexanderb Coin Collector

    Great crate. I'd like to see what the Historian at the US Treasury Office or the Smithsonian has to say about it's authenticity.

    Bruce
     
  4. wunderer

    wunderer tink

    I am doubting they read their emails. No reply yet.
     
  5. fretboard

    fretboard Defender of Old Coinage!

    Very cool crate!!
     
  6. Conder101

    Conder101 Numismatist

    At the early mint in Philadelphia they DID use kegs for the transportation of the cent planchets and for transporting the finished coinage. I don't know exactly when the kegs were phased out (The Randall hoard of 1816 to 1820 large cents found in the 1860's were in kegs so they were probably in use until the 1820's) were but I do know that in the 1870's they were using canvas bags. The only boxes that I know were used for transporting coins were the pyx boxes for the annual assays.

    As for Wells Fargo transporting coin for the Denver mint, they may have but remember the Denver mint wasn't even in existence until 1906 and by the 1920's the shipments were already being made by the equivalent of motorized armored cars and those were bags.
     
  7. desertgem

    desertgem Senior Errer Collecktor Supporter

    The cases appear modern as shipping crates in the later 1800s, early 1900's were usually rough thicker wood 4/4-8/4 for heavy things such as coins or machinery parts. I also have not seen commercial crates that appear to be fine dovetailed 3/4. As conder101 said, most coins were in rough kegs or canvas bags, and the bags usually had the minimum information and printing, and no illustrations. Pure souvenir type IMO.

    Jim
     
  8. ikandiggit

    ikandiggit Currency Error Collector

  9. micheldura2

    micheldura2 Senior Member

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