DAR – Great Women of the American Revolution – Mary Videau – Pewter Medallion – After being held as a rebel spy aboard a British prison ship in Charleston harbor, she planned and executed a daring escape along with several other patriots. Originally commissioned in 1974 by the Daughters of the American Revolution and issued by the Franklin Mint by subscription, less than 1,000 examples of this beautiful high-relief medallic piece were issued. This medal was struck from 43 grams of fine pewter and has a 45 millimeter diameter.
Originally commissioned in 1974 by the Daughters of the American Revolution and issued by the Franklin Mint by subscription, less than 1,000 examples of this beautiful high-relief medallic piece were issued. This medal was struck from 43 grams of fine pewter and has a 45 millimeter diameter.
Originally commissioned in 1974 by the Daughters of the American Revolution and issued by the Franklin Mint by subscription, less than 1,000 examples of this beautiful high-relief medallic piece were issued. This medal was struck from 43 grams of fine pewter and has a 45 millimeter diameter.
DAR – Great Women of the American Revolution – Eliza Lucas Pinckney – Pewter Medallion – She cultivated new crops and supervised seven plantations in South Carolina. Later, her two sons served with great distinction during the Revolution. Originally commissioned in 1974 by the Daughters of the American Revolution and issued by the Franklin Mint by subscription, less than 1,000 examples of this beautiful high-relief medallic piece were issued. This medal was struck from 43 grams of fine pewter and has a 45 millimeter diameter.
This medal was struck from 43 grams of fine pewter and has a 45 millimeter diameter.
DAR – Great Women of the American Revolution – Meliscent Barrett – Pewter Medallion – Although she was only 15, she supervised a group of women and young girls who made all the cartridges used by patriots at the Battle of Concord. Originally commissioned in 1974 by the Daughters of the American Revolution and issued by the Franklin Mint by subscription, less than 1,000 examples of this beautiful high-relief medallic piece were issued. This medal was struck from 43 grams of fine pewter and has a 45 millimeter diameter.
Originally commissioned in 1974 by the Daughters of the American Revolution and issued by the Franklin Mint by subscription, less than 1,000 examples of this beautiful high-relief medallic piece were issued. This medal was struck from 43 grams of fine pewter and has a 45 millimeter diameter.
USA – COMITIA AMERICANA medal – Lt Col John E. Howard – 1973 – UNC – pewter – Led the bayonet charge at the Battle of Cowpens
Spain – Florez Estrada – 25 Pesetas – 1946 – Crisp Uncirculated – Pick 130a
This beautiful plate was struck from 8.385 ounces of Sterling silver, then gold-plated with 24 carat gold. It comes as issued by the Franklin Mint in 1975 with all of the accompanying paperwork.
Marshall Islands – To The Heroes of Pearl Harbor – $5 – 1991 – Brilliant Uncirculated – KM-35
Marshall Islands – Launch of Space Shuttle Discovery – $5 – 1988 – Brilliant Uncirculated
Tristan da Cunha – Lord Nelson – Trafalgar Bicentennial – 2005 – One Crown – Brilliant Uncirculated
This piece has been graded by NGC as MS 69 and is identified with the serial number 1993395-012.
This coin is a genuine German Third Reich 2 Reichsmark silver coin from the 1930s, which has been used as a host for a colored depiction of the disaster on that day. An inexpensive silver token marking an infamous aviation disaster.
Marshall Islands – To the Heroes of Desert Storm – $5 – 1991 – Brilliant Uncirculated – KM-40
Medallic Art Company – Founding Fathers – South Carolina – Thomas Lynch, Jr. – 32 mm High Relief Bronze Medal – with $2 Bill & COA – This beautiful high relief medal was struck by the Medallic Art Company, one of the nation’s premier private mints, from approximately 22 grams of pure bronze. The medal has a diameter of 32 millimeters and was part of the Founding Fathers series of medals issued by the mint. This piece depicts Thomas Lynch, Jr. from South Carolina, one of the signers of the Declaration of Independence on July 4th, 1776 and is accompanied by a Crisp Uncirculated Bicentennial Two Dollar banknote that depicts the signing of the Declaration of Independence on the back, as shown in the images. The Medal and Banknote come accompanied with a Certificate of Authenticity which displays a copy of the original painting by John Trumbull entitled “Declaration of Independence” which is exhibited in the Capitol Rotunda in Washington, DC. and is the template for the design of the back of the 2 Dollar Bill. The reverse of the Certificate of Authenticity also displays the name of the signer, of which colony he was a delegate and his signature as it appears on the nation’s founding document.
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