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1896 Bryan Money SCH-845

Strike Type
1896 Bryan Money SCH-845

Coin Details

Year
1896
Denomination
So-Called Dollars
Series
Monetary & Miscellaneous So-Called Dollars

Description

This 1896 Bryan Money token (SCH-845) is a political piece from the Free Silver campaign when bimetallism was the dominant political issue in American life. 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.' Fred Schornstein's 2001 TAMS publication 'Bryan Money' (with a 2012 supplement and price guide) provides the definitive catalog using SCH numbers alongside HK numbers. The HK series spans HK-777 through HK-786 and HK-1010 through HK-1015, with the earliest Tiffany productions (HK-777 at 49mm, 776 1/3 grains) and the Gorham series (HK-780 through HK-783) being the most collected. The unique HK-1015, a 54mm Bryan vs. McKinley piece, is known from only one specimen. 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. Many SCH-numbered varieties are rare, with only a handful of known examples for some numbers. The comprehensive Schornstein catalog includes hundreds of varieties, and assembling a complete collection represents a significant numismatic challenge.

External References

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