Archive available at http://www.ChicagoCoinClub.org/ | |
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Volume 60 No. 2 | February 2014 |
For this year’s ANA convention, I am looking for many new exhibitors, and not just YNs. The ANA web site has pages on building an exhibit — the application and rules for exhibiting at the 2013 convention have been removed, but I expect the rules and application for 2014 should be on the web site by mid March. I was told by ANA staff that the Convention Theme has been selected, but my source was not sure of the exact wording; I mention this only because one of the 20 exhibiting classes is Convention Theme. In the past, each exhibitor received an ANA exhibitor medal — the obverse used the design from the front of the convention’s medal, and the reverse stated that the medal was awarded to exhibitors and judges at the convention. Remember, August 5-9! Email any questions and comments to chatter_editor@yahoo.com and someone from the local committee will respond.
The 1141st meeting of the Chicago Coin Club was held January 8, 2014 in the Chicago Bar Association Building, 321 S. Plymouth Court, Downtown Chicago. President Elliott Krieter called the meeting to order at 7 PM with an attendance of 19 members and 3 guests: Anne Anaszewicz, Frances Donovon, and Lorenzo Vendramin.
During a slight delay caused by the inclement weather, the Secretary announced the call from Central States Numismatic Society for exhibits at their April 23-26 convention in Schaumburg. Exhibit application forms were passed out and every member was encouraged to participate.
A motion was passed to accept the December Minutes as published in the Chatter. Treasurer Steve Zitowsky reported December revenue of $3,667.25, expenses of $2,614.23 and total assets of $23,149.34 held in Life Membership $2,390.00 and member equity $20,759.34. He also reported total 2013 revenue of $22,878.69, expenses of $21,209.71, showing a net income of $1,668.98. After several questions, a motion was passed to approve the report.
Following the second reading of Melissa Morsi’s application of membership, a motion was passed to accept her application.
The minutes from the Club’s Board of Directors meeting of December 18, 2013 appeared in the January Chatter. Following the reading of the two motions needing general membership approval, a motion was passed to approve:
President Krieter appointed Jeff Rosinia Chairman of the Club’s 95th Anniversary celebration. The theme of ANA’s National Coin Week on April 20-26 is “Coin and Country: Celebrating Civil Service” and a Chairman to lead Club activities is being sought.
First VP Rich Lipman introduced featured speaker Jeffrey Amelse who delivered a program on Collectibles from Chicago’s 1893 Columbian Exposition. Eight members also showed Columbian Exposition items from their collections. Rich Lipman presented Jeff with an engraved speaker’s medal suspended from a neck ribbon.
Second VP Marc Stackler announced the evening’s ten exhibitors. GERARD ANASZEWICZ: 5 “Lauer” jetons with Russian motifs, and a book by Igor Rudenko on the subject. DAVID GUMM: 2013 Canadian $3.00 coin in .9999 silver. JAMES McMENAMIN: Irish bank notes from Bank of Ireland and Northern Bank. MARK WIECLAW: 3 examples of chocolate money and a rare antoninianus of Pacatian, 248 AD. ROBERT D. LEONARD, JR.: 3 Viking coins. WILLIAM BURD: 4 Chicago Merchant Club Tokens of 10 cent, 25 cent, 50 cent and $1.00 value, with complimentary packets for everyone of the 10, 25 and 50 cent tokens with a history of the organization. DALE LUKANICH: 4 Iranian bank notes and the new Canadian $5 and $10 bank notes. JEFFREY ROSINIA: two ANACS graded and slabbed 1990-O Morgan dollars, one graded MS61 and a former pocket piece PO1. STEVE ZITOWSKY: Kunkels Opera Troupe (1857-61) token over-struck on a Peruvian 1788 2 reales, and an anonymous IV Century AD coin from Axum. Richard Lipman: U.S. Banknotes with unusual serial numbers.
Adjournment was at 9:14 PM with the next meeting on February 12, 2014 at the same location.
Respectfully Submitted,
Carl Wolf,
Secretary
a presentation by Jeffrey A. Amelse,
to our January 8, 2014 meeting
The World’s Columbian Exposition has been closed for more than 120 years, and it still is remembered. At least around here, and by us! Jeff’s program featured slides of items found on the internet as well as pictures and information from books. He started with statistics from this big event that ran for six months, from May 1 to October 31, 1893. Daily visitors totalled 27.5 million, at a time when the total U.S. population was 63 million. Many guide books and souvenirs were acquired by the visitors — back home, they were shared or put into storage, only now to trickle onto eBay.
Except for one, the buildings on the fair grounds were temporary, consisting of a metal frame clad in a white material similar to stucco. The style was a sort of Renaissance Revival: two- and three-story buildings with windows, columns, and domes. The major buildings were located around large lagoons, and we saw pictures of gondolas carrying fair visitors. The fair site was the first example of extensive electric lighting, both internal and external. Among the photos shown from Shepp’s World Fair Photographed by J.W. and D.B. Shepp (1893), a view inside the Transportation Building showed a large number of horse-drawn carriages. The Palace of Fine Arts was the only permanent building built on the fair grounds — it now houses the Museum of Science and Industry. The other permanent building built for the fair, but located off the fair grounds, was the World’s Congress Auxiliary Building — it now houses the Art Institute of Chicago. Jeff concluded the review of buildings with a list of the costs of the fair buildings, from Glimpses of the World’s Fair Through a Camera (1893).
The Columbian Exposition saw the introduction of a number of items, the most famous of which might be the Ferris Wheel. Food products that debuted there included Juicy Fruit Gum, Cracker Jack, Quaker Oats, and Pabst Blue Ribbon Beer. No one thought to bring samples (new or 120 years old) for our enjoyment, and I do not recall seeing any Collectibles featuring those items among the items that Jeff showed us. Jeff started showing Collectibles with the six portrait admission tickets; these were printed on bond paper by the American Bank Note Company of New York. One million tickets were printed in the first run, using four portraits to represent four epochs in New World history: Indian, Columbus, Washington, and Lincoln; these went on sale one month before the fair opened. The 500,00 tickets of the second run were printed with an “A” on the front, near the portrait. Two different portrait tickets were printed later: Ben Franklin, for his studies of electricity, and Handel, whose Water Music was played at many fair venues. J.P. Doolin’s 1893 — Columbian Exposition, Admission and Concession Tickets (1981) has a wealth of information on the tickets, including the lowest and highest known serial number for each type and printing of the portrait tickets. The Rand, McNally & Company of Chicago printed 25 million of the tickets good only for the day of sale, and they have their own digit and letter coding method to show when they were sold. Special tickets were sold for special days, such as Chicago Day and Manhattan Day; and there were tickets for children. After the Exposition closed, The Claxton Company of Chicago bought all remainder tickets, and for years anyone could buy a set of portrait, special, and general admission tickets in a small envelope.
The U.S. mint introduced commemorative coinage for the exposition: a half dollar featuring Columbus, and a quarter dollar featuring Queen Isabella. About one million of the halves were minted in 1892 (the original year for the exposition — Chicago histories of the fair do not emphasize that the expo was a year late), and four million were minted in 1893. Less than 400,000 of them sold at the original price of $1; about 2.5 million dated 1893 were melted, and the remaining two million were placed into circulation. The Isabella quarter also had problems when sold at $1 (for the same price asked for a Columbus half): of the 40,000 minted, about half were melted after the fair, even after fair managers bought thousands after the fair, as did the Scott Stamp and Coin Company.
Elongated coins were another item that first appeared at this exposition. We saw a few examples of the many coins (contemporary U.S., obsolete U.S., and foreign) that were rolled out with some legend mentioning 1893 Columbian Exposition. For such a big event, the exposition had many medals struck by and for many organizations; the U.S. Mint even had a press on the premises to produce medals. Some medals were crude, others quite artistic; some in low relief, and some in high relief; some used allegorical figures, and others filled a side with small text boasting of the issuer; A wide range of metals were used: some silver, many in copper alloys, many identified now as in white metal (a mixture of tin, lead, and any available metal that was cheap), and many in that then-new and wondrous metal — aluminum. Although known for more than a hundred years, it had been treated as a rare metal due to the difficulty in refining it. But with a new process that used the large amounts of electricity that were just being generated, refining aluminum became an inexpensive proposition; hence its use in many medals and tokens, many of which identified the wonderful properties of the metal.
The standard reference for medals of the exposition is Nathan Eglit’s Columbiana, The Medallic History of Christopher Columbus and the Columbian Exposition of 1893. From the medals we saw during the presentation, the most common design element must be Christopher Columbus, with buildings and sights of the exposition coming in second — but we saw fewer than 30 of the medals with Eglit numbers, while the book has more than 600. Some of the medal pictures were of lots in The Hoffman Collection auction held by Ira and Larry Goldberg in September, 2012.
Jeff concluded the presentation by showing a few examples of other collectibles produced for the exposition. We saw a few spoons with images of various buildings in the bowls, and we saw Art Glass drinking glasses with wording about the fair. Many other souvenirs were produced, such as plates and ash trays — and there are reference books available for some of these items, too. What’s in your library?
CSNS Convention | Chicago Coin Company |
CPMX & CICF | Harlan J. Berk, Ltd. |
Items shown at our January 8, 2014 meeting,
reported by Marc Stackler
January 22, 2014
Following a dinner compliments of William Burd, the third meeting of the 2014 Chicago ANA Convention Committee was called to order at 7:30 PM by Host Chairman William Burd on Wednesday, January 22, 2014 in the Fireplace Room, Rosewood Restaurant, 9241 W. Higgins Road, Rosemont, IL.
The following members were present: Steve Zitowsky, Sharon Blocker, Eugene Freeman, Scott McGowan, Mark Wieclaw, Harlan Berk, Elliott Krieter, Rich Lipman, Paul Hybert, Dale Lukanich, Jeff Rosinia and Carl Wolf. Also attending were Kim Kiick, ANA Executive Director, and Rhonda Scurek, ANA Convention Director.
William Burd was given another warm round of applause for hosting the event and the meeting was adjourned at 8:56 PM with the next meeting scheduled for Wednesday, February 19, 2014, in the offices of Harlan J. Berk, Ltd., 77 W. Washington, Suite 1320, Downtown Chicago.
Respectfully Submitted,
Carl Wolf,
Secretary
Chicago Coin Club
Date: | February 12, 2014 |
Time: | 6:45 PM |
Location: | Downtown Chicago
At the Chicago Bar Association, 321 S. Plymouth Court, 3rd floor meeting room. Please remember the security measures at our meeting building: everyone must show their photo-ID and register at the guard’s desk. Nearby parking: South Loop Self Park, 318 South Federal Street; that is two short blocks west of our meeting site. Note: Their typical rate of $29 is reduced to $6 if you eat at the Plymouth Restaurant, 327 S. Plymouth Court (next to our meeting site at the CBA), show them your parking ticket, and ask the restaurant for a parking voucher. The restaurant offers standard sandwiches, burgers, and salads for members who want to meet for dinner. Another before-meeting favorite of some members is the Ceres Restaurant, located inside the Board of Trade Building, at LaSalle and Jackson. |
Featured speaker: | Eugene Freeman — Love Tokens: Their History and Collectability |
A Love Token is a coin with a smoothed flat side(s), then hand engraved. Most tokens were engravings of initials; names and dates were also popular and the most scarce were sayings, prayers, and pictures. The coins were made as keepsakes and mementos from the giver to the recipient. Some bronze love tokens exist, but the silver coins,especially the 10 cent size, were most popular, probably because the engravings would oxidize and make the design stand out. Eugene Freeman and his wife LuAnn have collected love tokens for many years. Be sure to attend this meeting and hear the story of when love tokens first began, and how their use as an expression of love became very popular during the Victorian Era. Gene promises to show a great assortment with beautiful and artistic designs. |
Unless stated otherwise, our regular monthly CCC Meeting is in downtown Chicago on the second Wednesday of the month; the starting time is 6:45PM.
February | 12 | CCC Meeting - Featured Speaker - Eugene Freeman on Love Tokens: Their History and Collectability |
March | 7-9 | 20th Annual Chicago Paper Money Expo (CPMX) at the Crown Plaza Chicago O’Hare, 5440 North River Road, Rosemont, IL. Admission is $5 for Friday and Saturday; free on Sunday. For details, refer to their website, http://www.cpmxshow.com. |
March | 8 | CCC Meeting - 1pm at the Chicago Paper Money Expo,
which is held at the Crown Plaza Chicago O’Hare, 5440 North River Road, Rosemont, IL.
No admission charge for our meeting.
Featured Speaker - to be announced |
March | 12 | CCC Meeting - Featured Speaker - to be announced |
April | 9 | CCC Meeting - Featured Speaker - to be announced |
April | 11-13 | 39th annual Chicago International Coin Fair (CICF) at the Crown Plaza Chicago O’Hare, 5440 North River Road, Rosemont, IL. Admission is $5 for Friday and Saturday; free on Sunday. For details, refer to their website, http://www.cicfshow.com. |
April | 12 | CCC Meeting - 1pm at the Chicago International Coin Fair (CICF),
which is held at the Crown Plaza Chicago O’Hare, 5440 North River Road, Rosemont, IL.
No admission charge for our meeting.
Featured Speaker - to be announced |
April | 24-26 | 75th Anniversary Convention of the Central States Numismatic Society at the Schaumburg Renaissance Hotel & Convention Center, 1551 North Thoreau Drive, Schaumburg, IL. Free public admission. For details, refer to their website, http://www.centralstates.info/conv.html. |
April | 26 | CCC Meeting - 1pm at the CSNS Convention,
which is held at the Schaumburg Convention Center.
Featured Speaker - to be announced |
All correspondence pertaining to Club matters
should be addressed to the Secretary and mailed to:
CHICAGO COIN CLUB
P.O. Box 2301
CHICAGO, IL 60690
http://www.ChicagoCoinClub.org/
Elliott Krieter | - President |
Richard Lipman | - First Vice President |
Marc Stackler | - Second Vice President |
William Burd | - Archivist |
Directors: | Steve Ambos
Robert Feiler Dale Lukanich Mark Wieclaw |
Other positions held are: | |
Jeffrey Rosinia | - Immediate Past President |
Carl Wolf | - Secretary |
Steve Zitowsky | - Treasurer |
Paul Hybert | - Chatter Editor |
Robert Feiler | - ANA Club Representative |
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