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Baroque Bloke |
During WW II the US government issued fractional cent coins (tokens?) made of some dense composite material. Two kinds – one red, one green. As a little kid I liked them because of their pretty colors. I can’t remember their denominations; maybe 1/5¢ and 1/10¢? And maybe issued by a state government rather than the US government, for sales tax? (I lived in Missouri.) I expected to easily find info about them on the web, but haven’t scored even a single hit. Looking for help! I also vaguely remember a thinner plastic token, too, but not sure of that. Serious about crackers | ||
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Updated link in below post I'm alright it's the rest of the world that's all screwed up! | |||
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Member |
During the depression some cities and a few states issued fractional cent tokens for sales taxes. They may have been still in use during the war. They were not issued by the federal.gov. So only used in local transactions. Because then as today paying a penny when you only owe 1/10 cent in tax is some BS. But most folks today don’t sweat 9/10 of a cent. But back then it added up when a few pennies could actually buy you something. | |||
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Like this? https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sales_tax_token I'm alright it's the rest of the world that's all screwed up! | |||
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There you go. If the OP grew up in Missouri then as the wiki link suggests that in MO they were used until the late 40’s. he would remember these still in use as a child. Sorry for being a coin and history geek. There was also fractional currency put out by the US gov in the past. But that another story.
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Baroque Bloke |
Thanks guys! SigForum is an awesome resource. Serious about crackers | |||
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I had a collection of Missouri mills when I was a kid. I always found them interesting. 3 denominations, IIRC. | |||
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Muzzle flash aficionado |
I remember such tokens. They were called "mils" because they were 1/1000 of a Dollar. Most if not all states now round up sales taxes to the penny, so mils aren't needed any more. flashguy Texan by choice, not accident of birth | |||
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My other Sig is a Steyr. |
Had no idea about these. I did find a few silver coins once. One of them was for 3¢. | |||
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I remember them in Missouri and we moved back to New England in 1965 when I was 11 so definitely around in the late fifties if not the early sixties, too. I seem to recall red and green ones. Harshest Dream, Reality | |||
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Peace through superior firepower |
Well, that's mighty queer. | |||
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Member |
George Kennedy, in the movie The Eiger Sanction -- "He looks like he could change a nine-dollar bill in threes." | |||
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My other Sig is a Steyr. |
From what I was told, the 3¢ coin was made to buy a 3¢ stamp. They also had a $3 coin for buying 100 stamps. When the price of postage was lowered, they started making 2¢ coins and a $2 coin (as well as a two dollar bill). The 20¢ coin came later. | |||
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Muzzle flash aficionado |
I remember 3¢ stamps but not a 3¢ coin. I think we usually bought blocks of 25 stamps for 75¢. flashguy Texan by choice, not accident of birth | |||
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Baroque Bloke |
I didn’t know of US 3¢ coins. But here’s one for sale on Amazon. A very appealing coin. 1865 Nickel 3-Cent Piece https://www.amazon.com/dp/B007...XREQ4EJEQ16PEJFEVHJM Serious about crackers | |||
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