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1917 HK-885, Aluminum, Elder World War I Issues Dollar

Strike Type
1917 HK-885, Aluminum, Elder World War I Issues Dollar

Coin Details

Year
1917
Denomination
So-Called Dollars
Strike Type
Regular Strike
Series
Monetary & Miscellaneous So-Called Dollars
Composition
N/A

Auction Record

$600 MS63PL 08-20-2019 Stack's Bowers

Description

This 1917 Thomas L. Elder World War I commemorative (HK-885) is part of one of the most extensive privately produced World War I commemorative medal series in American numismatics. The Elder WWI series (HK-877 through HK-907), produced between 1917 and 1919, encompasses approximately 30 distinct catalog numbers struck in multiple metals including brass, bronze, aluminum, copper, silver, and antiqued copper, creating dozens of varieties. This constitutes one of the most extensive privately produced World War I commemorative medal series in American numismatics, reflecting Elder's entrepreneurial approach to medallic production. The series divides into three subcategories: peace medals commemorating the November 1918 Armistice and expressing hope for lasting peace; victory medals celebrating the Allied triumph in the Great War and the subsequent Versailles negotiations; and 'Good Luck' medals reflecting wartime superstitious practices, serving as both patriotic souvenirs and talismans for soldiers and their families during a period of profound national anxiety. So-called dollars acquired their name because they are not true dollar coins but rather privately issued medals that approximate the size and weight of U.S. silver dollars. The collecting specialty emerged in the early 20th century and was formalized by the Hibler-Kappen catalog, which organized hundreds of diverse pieces — from exposition medals to political tokens to private monetary experiments — into a coherent collecting framework.

Rarity Notes

Thomas Elder WWI so-called dollars survive in varying numbers across the extensive series. Aluminum examples tend to be scarcer than brass issues. Some HK numbers in the Elder WWI range are quite rare, while others are more readily available. The lettered variants (b, c, d suffixes) typically represent rarer die states or compositions.

Cross References

HK-885; PCGS #643695

External References

Error Varieties

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