(1863) German-Silver Civil War Patriotic Token F-427/472j, Union-East Boston
Strike Type
Coin Details
Description
Civil War patriotic token combining Fuld obverse die 427, a patriotic design from East Boston, with reverse die 472 bearing the inscription "REDEEMED". Patriotic tokens filled the currency vacuum created when Americans hoarded federal coins after the suspension of specie payments in December 1861. Die sinkers and token manufacturers stepped in to supply the cent-sized pieces that commerce demanded. Copper was the standard metal for patriotic tokens, chosen because cent-sized copper pieces could pass as substitute federal cents in everyday commerce. Bearing the date 1863. Congress banned private token issuance in April 1864, and the introduction of fractional currency notes and new bronze two-cent pieces gradually eliminated the need for emergency tokens. Survival rates for patriotic tokens vary enormously by die combination, with some pairings known from thousands of examples and others from fewer than five specimens.
Rarity Notes
Fuld 427/472j. Die pairing: obverse 427, reverse 472. Copper is the most common composition, representing the majority of surviving specimens. The Fuld rarity scale ranges from R-1 (over 5,000 known) to R-10 (unique); survival depends on the specific die combination, metal, and condition.
Cross References
Fuld 427/472j
External References
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