View All Civil War Store Cards - Wisconsin

(1863) Copper Civil War Store Card F-220B-1a, A.R. WI

Strike Type
(1863) Copper Civil War Store Card F-220B-1a, A.R. WI

Coin Details

Year
1863
Denomination
Store Cards
Strike Type
Regular Strike
Series
Civil War Store Cards
Composition
Copper
Weight
4.67g
Diameter
19mm
Edge
Plain

Description

Fuld 220B-1a — store card of A.R., Fonddulac, Wisconsin. Wisconsin was a growing frontier state with Milwaukee as its largest commercial center, and its merchants issued tokens as practical solutions to the coin shortage. With 3 known varieties, A.R. produced a modest number of token types. The copper composition of this variety (Fuld 220B-1a) is common for this merchant. Many Civil War tokens share common reverse dies, as die sinkers paired merchant-specific obverses with stock patriotic or advertising reverses. Store cards circulated as emergency currency after wartime hoarding removed federal coins from commercial channels. The Act of April 22, 1864 effectively ended private coinage by imposing penalties of up to five years imprisonment and a $2,000 fine for producing unauthorized coins or tokens. Civil War store cards are collected both as numismatic items and as historical documents of wartime American commerce.

Rarity Notes

Copper strikings are generally the most common metal variant for Civil War store cards, as copper was the standard planchet material mimicking the federal cent. With 3 cataloged varieties, A.R. was a limited producer of Civil War tokens.

Cross References

Fuld 220B-1a

External References

Error Varieties

No listings found

This category doesn't have any child listings yet.