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Two 1863 Civil War trade tokens

In Military and Wartime > Civil War Tokens > Show & Tell.
flashlarue's items86 of 268WW2 photo of an US Army dog Libbey harvest gold glasses
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    Posted 4 years ago

    flashlarue
    (268 items)

    With a scarcity of money during the Civil War trade tokens became popular. These are two such tokens. The Indian head was common on many of the tokens while the flag is a bit more unusual.

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    Comments

    1. blunderbuss2 blunderbuss2, 4 years ago
      The "Union" was broke and businesses had to resort to tokens because there was no hard currency. These actually can bring good money.
    2. blunderbuss2 blunderbuss2, 4 years ago
      The term "DIX" seems strange to me, as the term "Dixie" is derived from Dix, which was based on a French term for 10, which was the strongest money in the Americas at the time. The origin is from a French banque in New Orleans and the preferred stable currency at the time. The South relied heavily on European trade and the South held 80-85% of the wealth of the "States" when the CW broke out. The Federal currency was much less stable at the time, so businesses issued tokens to "take up the slack" of the weak Federal $. In other words, they didn't have change.

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