1896 Aluminum Bryan Money SCH-902
Strike TypeCoin Details
Description
Cataloged as SCH-902 in the Schornstein Bryan Money reference, this 1896 aluminum token documents the extraordinary volume of political material produced during the Bryan presidential campaigns. Bryan lost to William McKinley in both 1896 and 1900, then lost to William Howard Taft in 1908. He served as Secretary of State under Woodrow Wilson from 1913 to 1915, negotiating peace treaties with thirty nations before resigning over Wilson's confrontational stance toward Germany after the Lusitania sinking. Bryan later became famous for his prosecution role in the Scopes 'Monkey Trial' in Dayton, Tennessee, where he died on July 26, 1925, five days after the trial concluded. The 'comparative' Bryan Dollars were struck in coin silver by prestigious Eastern silversmiths including Gorham Manufacturing Company of Providence, Rhode Island (founded 1831, the world's largest silver company), Tiffany & Co. of New York, Spaulding & Co., and the George H. Ford Company. These sophisticated, text-heavy pieces physically demonstrate the size a silver dollar would be under Bryan's 16-to-1 proposal, often showing the smaller contemporary Morgan dollar for comparison. The 'satirical' Bryan pieces were crudely cast in base metals with mocking slogans like 'In God We Trust, In Bryan We Bust' and 'United Snakes of America.' The HK numbering system groups so-called dollars broadly by type: exposition and commemorative pieces in the lower numbers, with monetary, miscellaneous, and later additions in higher ranges. Lettered suffixes (a, b, c, d) typically indicate variant compositions or die states of the same basic design, while entries above HK-900 include pieces added in later catalog supplements.
Rarity Notes
Bryan Money tokens cataloged in the Schornstein reference vary widely in rarity. Examples in unusual compositions like aluminum tend to be scarcer than standard base-metal issues. The comprehensive Schornstein catalog includes hundreds of varieties, and assembling a complete collection represents a significant numismatic challenge.
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