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Commems Collection Classic: Quick Bits #67 - Multi-Congress Commemorative Coins

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commems's Avatar
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 Posted 05/21/2022  5:24 pm Show Profile   Bookmark this topic Add commems to your friends list Get a Link to this Message Number of Subscribers
Most commemorative coin bills of the classic era were introduced, considered/debated and passed in the same session of Congress (sometimes across two sessions of the same Congress). There were instances, however, of a coin proposal being considered across two distinct Congresses.

This post takes a quick look at them.


1936 Norfolk, VA Bicentennial/Tricentennial

Introduced: 74th Congress, 2nd Session
Amended & Approved: 74th Congress, 2nd Session
Re-Introduced: 75th Congress, 1st Session
Re-Approved: 75th Congress, 1st Session

The commemorative piece for the 300th Anniversary of the Norfolk land grant and 200th Anniversary of the establishment of Norfolk, VA as a borough, was introduced in the 74th Congress via House and Senate companion bills as a 50-cent coin. As the bill was being considered by Congress, it was amended in the Senate to specify a medal vs. a coin. The bill was approved and it appeared as if Norfolk's anniversaries would be celebrated via a US Mint-struck commemorative medal. When the 75th Congress convened, however, it approved several commemorative coin bills. This caused the Norfolk sponsor to reconsider its acceptance of a medal and it restarted its push for a 50-cent coin. It was successful in its efforts, and secured the half dollar collectors are familiar with today.

Commems-Collection-Classic:-Quick-Bits-#67---Multi-Congress-Commemorative-Coins Commems-Collection-Classic:-Quick-Bits-#67---Multi-Congress-Commemorative-Coins

For more of the Norfolk medal vs. coin story, see:

- 1936 Norfolk Bicentennial / Tricentennial - Medal Vs. Coin


1937 Battle of Antietam 75th Anniversary Half Dollar

Introduced: 74th Congress, 2nd Session
Approved: 75th Congress, 1st Session

A coinage bill for the Battle of Antietam 75th Anniversary was introduced during the Second Session of the 74th Congress and was ready to be authorized in its waning days, but, due to an apparent clerical error, was not brought up for a final vote in the House before it adjourned. As a result, the bill died and needed to be re-introduced in order for the Antietam half dollar to become a reality. A new Antietam bill was subsequently introduced at the opening of the 75th Congress and was soon passed.

Commems-Collection-Classic:-Quick-Bits-#67---Multi-Congress-Commemorative-Coins Commems-Collection-Classic:-Quick-Bits-#67---Multi-Congress-Commemorative-Coins

For more of the Antietam story, see:

- 1937 Battle Of Antietam 75th Anniversary - Revisited


For other posts about the Norfolk and Antietam half dollars, as well as other of my posts about commemorative coins and medals, check out: Commems Collection..




Collecting history one coin or medal at a time! (c) commems. All rights reserved.
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Coinfrog's Avatar
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 Posted 05/21/2022  5:57 pm  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add Coinfrog to your friends list Get a Link to this Reply
Good stuff, thanks!
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hokiefan_82's Avatar
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 Posted 05/22/2022  11:52 am  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add hokiefan_82 to your friends list Get a Link to this Reply
Thanks for those interesting bits of history!
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My U.S. Classic Commemorative Complete Set: https://www.NGCcoin.com/registry/co...sets/278741/
My U.S. Fractional Note Set: https://notes.www.collectors-societ...eSetID=34188
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jbuck's Avatar
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 Posted 05/23/2022  12:10 pm  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add jbuck to your friends list Get a Link to this Reply
Fascinating! Interesting to see an example of "If they can have it why can't we?" affecting commemorative proposals.
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commems's Avatar
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 Posted 05/23/2022  4:25 pm  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add commems to your friends list Get a Link to this Reply

Quote:
Interesting to see an example of "If they can have it why can't we?"

Indeed! In a twist of that - I've always wondered what Ole Juulson Kvale (Farmer-Labor-MN) thought as the years went by (he served in the House from 1923 to 1931) and he watched multiple commemorative coins get approved after he deferred to the Treasury's wishes and accepted a medal vs. coin for the 1925 Norse-American Centennial (a personally important project).

I've long wondered how much he, and/or the medal's sponsor, regretted compromising on the issue.



Collecting history one coin or medal at a time! (c) commems. All rights reserved.
Edited by commems
05/23/2022 4:29 pm
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jbuck's Avatar
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nickelsearcher's Avatar
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 Posted 05/23/2022  7:01 pm  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add nickelsearcher to your friends list Get a Link to this Reply
Great info commems - thank you for your generous sharing


Quote:
I've always wondered what Ole Juulson Kvale (Farmer-Labor-MN) thought as the years went by (he served in the House from 1923 to 1931) and he watched multiple commemorative coins get approved after he deferred to the Treasury's wishes and accepted a medal vs. coin for the 1925 Norse-American Centennial


Indeed - and he would be aghast at the proliferation of trivial local interest commemorative coins issued in the ensuing years.
Take a look at my other hobby ... http://www.jk-dk.art
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