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Exonumia

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Assorted exonumia, including a poker chip and an elongated coin

Exonumia are numismatic items (such as tokens, medals, or scrip) other than coins and paper money. This includes "Good For" tokens, badges, counterstamped coins, elongated coins, encased coins, souvenir medallions, tags, wooden nickels and other similar items. It is an aspect of numismatics and many coin collectors are also exonumists.

Besides the above strict definition, others extend it to include non-coins which may or may not be legal tenders such as cheques, credit cards and similar paper. These can also be considered notaphily or scripophily.

Etymology

The noun exonumia is derived from two classical roots: exo, meaning "out-of" in Greek, and nummus, meaning "coin" in Latin (from Greek νοῦμμος – noummos, "coin"); thus, "out[side]-of-[the category]coins". Usually, the term "exonumia" is applied to these objects in the United States, while the equivalent British term is paranumismatica.

The words exonumist and exonumia were coined in July 1960 by Russell Rulau, a recognized authority and author on the subject, and accepted by Webster's dictionary in 1965.

Token Coins

Many tokens were produced and used as currency in the United States and elsewhere when there was a shortage of government-issued money. Tokens have been used for both to advertise and to facilitate commerce.

Token authority Russell Rulau offers a broad definition for exonumia, and lines between categories can be fuzzy. For example, an advertising token may also be considered a medal. Good For tokens may also advertise. Counter-stamped coins have been called "little billboards." Exonumia may include anything coin-like that is not a government-issued coin.

The English term "para-numismatica", or alongside currency, appears more limiting, hinting that tokens must have some sort of “value” or monetary usage. One definition of para-numismatica is anything coin-like but not a coin. In America this is not the accepted usage. Rulau's 1040 page tome, UNITED STATES TOKENS: 1700–1900 [1] includes many tokens without any monetary value depicted on the token. While he included many items, the book is not exhaustive.

The following groupings of categories are continually expanding. One way of parsing tokens is into these three general categories:

  • Has a "value," facilitating commerce, such as Good for (something).
  • Commemoration, remembrance, dedication, or the like, for some person, place, idea or event.
  • Of a personal nature.

Typically, catalogs of tokens are organized by location, time period, and/or type of item. Historically, the need for tokens grew out of the need for currency. In America, some tokens legally circulated alongside or instead of currency up until recently. Hard Times Tokens and Civil War Tokens each were the size of the contemporary cent. Afterwards, value based items, such as Good for (amount of money), Good for One Quart of Milk, Good for One Beer, Good for One Ride… and others were specifically linked to commerce of the store or place of issue.

For clarity, exonumia are numismatic items, other than government coins or paper money, which can be studied or collected.

Numismatic = coins, paper money, exonumia (numismatist)
Exonumia = tokens, medals, badges, ribbons, etc. (exonumist)
Notaphily = paper money (notaphile/notaphiliac).
Scripophily = stock certificates (scripophilist, scripophilac)
Medals have a clear distinction from tokens in that there is no monetary value on the item, nor any intent to be used as money. (medalist)

Medals

Medals are coin-like artistic objects, typically with a commemorative purpose. They may be awarded for recognition of achievement or created for sale to commemorate individuals or events. They may be souvenirs, devotional, or purely artistic. Medals are generally not used as currency or for exchange.

Exonumia Collecting

Exonumia collectors, like coin collectors, are attentive to condition and rarity, as well as to history, form and type. Exonumists may collect items by region, topic, type, shape or material. These different collecting preferences may change the ways tokens are documented, i.e., by region, time period, or type.

The following categories are typical. This is not all-inclusive but is a sampling of the wide variety of exonumia:

Tokens

Modified/Augmented:

  • Love Token: A coin with hand engraving, generally on one side, or deliberately bent
  • Hobo nickels Indian Head/Buffalo nickel: Engraved by hand mostly in the era 1913–38, usually a modification of the Indian head
  • Carved Potty coins, usually Trade Dollars, to show lady Liberty sitting on a chamber pot
  • Counterstamped / countermarked coins (done by merchants or governments)
  • Cut Coins: Coins that are artistically carved creations made from genuine coins, both new and old, often for jewelry.
  • Elongated coins: Rolled out with advertising, commemorative, or souvenir designs on one side
  • Encased Coin: Generally in a ring with advertising
  • Encased Postage: Actual postage stamps mounted into a round frame with advertising on the other side
  • Colored or painted circulation or bullion issues
A Smokey Bear Geocoin

Play-Game money / Arcade Amusement / Novelty

Government Services & Non-National tools to Facilitate Commerce

  • Car wash tokens
  • Jetons: Used as counters when verifying totals or weights of coins for commerce and exchange
  • Evasion tokens: 18th century semi-counterfeit were made to look like kind of but not exactly like actual currency[2]
  • Sales tax tokens: Issued by states and merchants
  • Parking tokens: for meters or gates
  • Dog licence tags
  • Post office tags
  • Food stamps
  • Slave tags – slave hire badges (Tax Receipts)

Transportation Tokens

  • Ferries and watercraft
  • Buses
  • Subway
  • Trains
  • Trams
  • Trolleys

Closed Community / Membership

Obverse of a communion token from South Leith Parish Church

Unique material / shapes

Movements and ideals

  • Temperance
  • Anti-slavery
  • Religious (including temple tokens)
  • World's Fair (Expositions around the world)
  • Locations
  • City or state anniversary

Of a Personal nature – Personals

  • Key tags (e.g. In case lost return to …)
  • Badges
    • Company
    • Occupation
  • Hand-engraved or uniquely counterstamped coins, as pocket pieces
  • Watch fobs
A Great Western Railway pay cheque

By Issuer or for a Specific Person

  • Milk/dairy
  • Bakery token
  • Beer
  • Pub/bar/saloon
  • Billiards/pool
  • Cigar/smoke shops
  • Restroom tokens for pay toilet use
  • Doctors (including apothecary tokens)
  • Automobiles
  • George Washington medals
  • Presidents, governors, other politicians
  • Inventors and other important persons

Modern items under the exonumia umbrella include:

Rulau in his 1700–1900 book historically breaks down American tokens into these general time periods:

Even though the following are legitimate categories for exonumia, they are not included in the 1700–1900 reference.

  • Amusement tokens
  • Military
  • Prison
  • Telephone tokens
  • Political campaign tokens
  • Transportation tokens
  • Medals 33 mm and larger
  • And others (ex: Fisherman tokens, SEX tokens)

Other forms in Latin America

Copper trade token of Durfee & Peck, Indian traders on Missouri River in various locations, circa 1869

Another important area of token collecting is Latin American coffee or plantation tokens. Many but not all of these tokens were made in the United States while others were made in Europe and England. These tokens are circulated in more than one language although Spanish is the prevalent one. Plantation tokens can have an array of denominations and names. The name can be the owner or their relatives. Sometimes the token can have the name of the farm (or finca). Lastly, tokens had allegorical symbols to identify the owner. Very little documentation exists since the inception of Latin American tokens, therefore, many tokens cannot be verified as to who the real owner is or what the symbol or symbols meant.

Tokens in Latin America were used as currency since there was not enough official currency available. Customarily, workers could convert the tokens to official currency on Saturdays. It is widely understood that many plantation owners in Latin America had their own commissaries, therefore, the workers were able to use the farm owners tokens to pay for provisions. It is important to note that in the 19th century many of the plantation workers and families lived in the farm they worked on.

Latin American tokens were made in all types of base metals and alloys plus plastic, celluloid and bakelite. Unique to Costa Rica were tokens made in paper fashion, either uniface or printed on both sides. Many people call these paper chits. The word "Boleto" is used solely in Costa Rica for the word token whereas "ficha" is used in the rest of Latin America.

See also

References

  1. ^ Rulau, Russell. Standard Catalog United States Tokens 1700-1900.
  2. ^ McKivor, Bill. "18th Century "EVASION" TOKENS". The Copper Corner. Retrieved 2017-01-30. The laws were written to cover Regal coinage. If a coin was made that was not an EXACT COPY of the Regal coin, it was considered to be a token, and the law did not apply. Thus, the counterfeiters simply switched from making counterfeit coins to making "Evasion" token coinage that looked somewhat like the regal coin.

Further reading