View All Civil War Store Cards - Ohio

(1864) Copper-Nickel Civil War Store Card F-165EA-7d, E. Myers & Co. OH

Strike Type
(1864) Copper-Nickel Civil War Store Card F-165EA-7d, E. Myers & Co. OH

Coin Details

Year
1864
Denomination
Store Cards
Strike Type
Regular Strike
Series
Civil War Store Cards
Composition
Copper-Nickel
Weight
4.2g
Diameter
19mm

Description

E. Myers & Co., based in Cincinnati, Ohio, produced this token as a cent substitute during the wartime coin shortage. Cincinnati's position as a Union Army supply center and Ohio River trade hub made it a prolific source of Civil War tokens. John Stanton and other die sinkers based in the city produced dies for merchants across the Midwest. E. Myers & Co. issued 9 die varieties, more than most Civil War merchants. The copper-nickel composition of this variety (Fuld 165EA-7d) is somewhat scarce for this merchant. Each unique combination of obverse and reverse dies constitutes a separate Fuld catalog number, even when struck in the same metal. The Civil War small change crisis generated the largest private coinage movement in American history, with merchants and die sinkers producing tokens for circulation. Copper-nickel strikings are moderately scarce, resembling the federal Indian Head cent in both size and color.

Rarity Notes

Copper-nickel strikings are moderately scarce compared to pure copper or brass versions. With 9 cataloged varieties, E. Myers & Co. was a minor token issuer.

Cross References

Fuld 165EA-7d

External References

Error Varieties

No listings found

This category doesn't have any child listings yet.