Share your favorites on Show & Tell

Kansas State Soldiers Home

In Military and Wartime > Civil War Tokens > Show & Tell.
Popular US Coins496 of 12171890 Carson City Morgan Silver Dollar1972D Ike Dollar AU 58 with strike thru mint error.
4
Love it
0
Like it

blunderbuss2blunderbuss2 loves this.
ChrisnpChrisnp loves this.
SEAN68SEAN68 loves this.
aghcollectaghcollect loves this.
See 2 more
Add to collection

    Please create an account, or Log in here

    If you don't have an account, create one here.


    Create a Show & TellReport as inappropriate


    Posted 10 years ago

    Mercy
    (12 items)

    Has anyone ever seen or heard of the use of this Token, or is it currecny.
    The Home it's self is located in Dodge City, Kansas. I have sent pic and made calls to places in Dodge that should have some idea as to the use of this token. No one in the state has a clue.
    The token is 29mm in Dia. , and looks to be of brass. The section below is what leads me to believe it is of the Civil War Era. If anyone has different thoughts about this please leave a comment. Would like to know if it is worth something.

    The Civil War Token Society (www.cwtsociety.com), the pre-eminent club for today’s collectors, suggests that to be “officially” considered a Civil War token, a piece must be between 18 and 25 millimeters in diameter. (Most of the copper tokens issued to pass as currency during the war were 18 or 19mm, the size of the federal government’s relatively new Flying Eagle and Indian Head cents, introduced to circulation in 1857 and 1859, respectively.

    Unsolved Mystery

    Help us close this case. Add your knowledge below.

    logo
    Civil War Tokens
    See all
    1865 Abraham Lincoln Assassinated Political Patriotic Civil War Token PCGS MS64
    1865 Abraham Lincoln Assassinated P...
    $330
    1863 Civil War Token Washington Portrait/Exchange Dies 117/420a #CWT107
    1863 Civil War Token Washington Por...
    $40
    1863 Detroit Michigan Civil War Token C L Crosby R7 NGC MS65 RB
    1863 Detroit Michigan Civil War Tok...
    $152
    Location Unknown Civil War Token The Continental R9 NGC MS65 Fuld Plate
    Location Unknown Civil War Token Th...
    $510
    logo
    1865 Abraham Lincoln Assassinated Political Patriotic Civil War Token PCGS MS64
    1865 Abraham Lincoln Assassinated P...
    $330
    See all

    Comments

    1. Chrisnp Chrisnp, 10 years ago
      Most soldier's homes were opened post-civil war, and the Kansas Soldier's home was opened in 1890. So, although Civil War veterans (along with veterans of other wars) lived there, I don't think this could be called a civil war token. Soldiers homes are still in existence.

      Tokens were used as money in commissaries and stores operated on the campus of soldier's homes. Their use varied from one state soldier's home to another.

      I can only guess that some soldier's homes found it safer to dole out tokens to the disabled and elderly residents than to let them accumulate cash in their rooms.

      I'm not saying this is the case with your token, but I happen to sometimes help with bingo games at the local Veteran's Administration Hospital, in their residential wing. We always buy "chits" (coupons) good at the VA commissary store to use as prizes because the hospital frowns on the resident patients having cash in their rooms.
    2. Mercy, 10 years ago
      I want to thank you Chrisnp for the comment. I am starting to understand a little more about the token. When I talked to the Home it's self about the token, "they have never seen of heard of such an Item". The Homes history museum has nothing on record of the token. The State historian of Kansas found nothing in his research.
      With all the reading I have done, here on the web with articles about the Soldiers Home. Articles that go back to the beginning, including expence reports. As I was reading the report it showed that a local farmer had been paid $3.00 for a wagon load of turnips. And the mans last name was Springer. The report had a date of the late 1800's. Yes i do have family ties to that part of the country, and I am 3rd generation Springer to have this token, am I related to the turnip Springer. I have no idea. The Mystery Continues.

    Want to post a comment?

    Create an account or login in order to post a comment.