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(1861-65) Brass Civil War Sutler Token S-G25B, G. Davidson-John Stanton

Strike Type
(1861-65) Brass Civil War Sutler Token S-G25B, G. Davidson-John Stanton

Coin Details

Year
1861
Denomination
Tokens
Strike Type
Regular Strike
Series
Civil War Sutler Tokens
Composition
Copper
Weight
4.5g
Diameter
23mm

Description

Civil War sutler token issued by G. Davidson. Struck in brass, this 25-cent token circulated as private camp currency redeemable for merchandise from the sutler. Sutler whose tokens were manufactured by John Stanton of Cincinnati. Davidson issued brass tokens in 5-cent and 25-cent denominations. The Stanton attribution confirms a Cincinnati or Ohio-region connection. Dies were cut by John Stanton of Cincinnati, Ohio. This brass composition was typical of sutler tokens, as the alloy offered manufacturers an economical way to produce durable camp currency. Brass planchets were procured through commercial metal distributors who supplied the broader token, button, and hardware manufacturing trade. Struck during the period when the federal coin shortage drove widespread adoption of privately issued tokens in military camps. The surviving population of sutler tokens is measured in the low thousands, a stark contrast to the abundant supply of patriotic and store card counterparts. Sutler pricing was subject to military oversight — the regimental council of administration reviewed charges and soldiers could formally protest what they considered unfair prices.

Rarity Notes

Schenkman S-G25B. All sutler tokens are rated R-5 or higher on the Fuld rarity scale (fewer than 200 surviving examples of any given variety). Brass strikes are common for sutler tokens. An estimated 4,000 to 6,000 sutler token pieces survive across all varieties.

Cross References

Schenkman S-G25B

External References

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