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Perish Credit. Perish Commerce. 1834

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jmcgarvey's Avatar
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 Posted 09/10/2013  5:50 pm Show Profile   Bookmark this topic Add jmcgarvey to your friends list Get a Link to this Message Number of Subscribers
Just found this in the collection. Can't seem to find to much information on it as to value. Any idea? And a possible grade?

Perish-Credit.-Perish-Commerce.-1834
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Dave H's Avatar
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1436 Posts
 Posted 09/10/2013  7:32 pm  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add Dave H to your friends list Get a Link to this Reply
I believe it to be high XF/low AU. Value around $50-60. Here's a write-up I found a while back...

1834 "Running Boar" Hard Times Token
Political discourse in the early 19th century was far more vitriolic than we have today for which this coin owes its origins. The huge fight between Jackson's Democratic party vs. the Federalists resulted in coins such as this one and in fact formed the root of the Republican party!
Few presidential vetoes have caused as much controversy as the one Andrew Jackson sent to Congress on July 10, 1832. The veto of the bill to re-charter the United States Bank was the prelude to a conflict over fiscal policy that continued through Jackson's second term and climaxed during the mid-term elections of 1834. The controversy created the background for the issuance of clothing buttons, ribbons and a great many tokens by the Whig opposition. The first tokens appeared in city elections in New York, then later in state and congressional elections and represent some of the first examples of dirty politicking in America.
J. Doyle DeWitt, in American Political Badges and Medals, writes: "Many of the political tokens...bore coarse and critical allusions to Jackson through the device of a , a hog and legends which continually repeated the word MY." (The Whigs accused Jackson of seeking dictatorial power by taking personal control of government assets.)
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CheetahCats's Avatar
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731 Posts
 Posted 09/10/2013  11:29 pm  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add CheetahCats to your friends list Get a Link to this Reply
HT-9, R-1. Pg.111 in Rulau 4th Ed.

These are low resolution pictures. If they were higher resolution, I could assess more succinctly. That said, I'd about AU.
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