US Mint – Dwight D. Eisenhower – Presidential Medal – 1953 – Bronze – 77 mm
US Mint – Richard Nixon – Presidential Medal – 1969 – Bronze – 77 mm
US Mint – Herbert Hoover – Presidential Medal – 1929 – Bronze – 77 mm – With Box
US Mint – Calvin Coolidge – Presidential Medal – 1923 – Bronze – 77 mm – With Box
US Mint – Benjamin Harrison – Presidential Medal – 1889 – Bronze – 77 mm – With Box
US Mint – Nixon & Agnew – Inaugural Medal – 1969 – Bronze – 70 mm
US Mint – Harry S. Truman – Presidential Medal – 1945 – Bronze – 77 mm
US Mint – Herbert Hoover – Presidential Medal – 1929 – Bronze – 77 mm
US Mint – Calvin Coolidge – Presidential Medal – 1923 – Bronze – 77 mm
US Mint – Woodrow Wilson – Presidential Medal – 1913 – Bronze – 77 mm
US Mint – Benjamin Harrison – Presidential Medal – 1889 – Bronze – 77 mm
US Mint – Grover Cleveland – Presidential Medal – 1885 – Bronze – 77 mm
US Mint – Chester A. Arthur – Presidential Medal – 1881 – Bronze – 77 mm
USA – American Red Cross – 1982 – 38mm – Congressional Bronze Medal – Mint Cellophane
By Jean Dassier, Swiss medalist and official engraver for Geneva from 1720-1763. AE 41mm. Composition: White Metal. Obv: Bust of Edward I, in armor, mantle and a crown, facing three-quarters left. Legend: EDOUARD . I . D . G. ANG . ET .HIB . REX. (Edward I, by the grace of God, King of England and Ireland). Rev: A circular temple with three niches containing statues of Minerva (for Edward’s wisdom and military genius), Prudence and Hercules (an allusion to the magnitude and variety of Edward’s enterprizes). At one side History is recording Edward’s deeds while two onlookers admire the monument on the other side. Exergue: NAT. 1230 . COR. 1272. MORT. 1307. (Born 1230, crowned 1272, died 1307).
United States Mint – Official Bronze Medal – Mint Director Donna Pope – 1983 – 75 millimeters – Mint Box — Donna Pope was appointed to the Ohio House of Representatives in 1972 and was later elected for four additional terms. Pope was selected to serve as minority whip from 1979 to 1981. She left the legislature in 1981 “in the middle of her last term” to serve as director of the United States Mint in 1981. Donna Pope was active in both civic and political organizations, She served as a Republican State Central Committeewoman, 1966-1972, a member of National Order of Women Legislators, and as vice chair of the Cuyahoga County Republican Executive Committee. Pope was also involved with the Citizens League of Greater Cleveland, the Ohio Constitutional Revision Commission, and the St. Francis de Sales Parish.
US Mint – Congressional Bronze Medal – Canadian Ambassador Kenneth Taylor – 1980 – 75 millimeters – Mint Box — The original hero after whom the latest Hollywood blockbuster, ARGO, was conceived, Canadian Ambassador Kenneth D Taylor gave sanctuary to six American diplomats who were not in the US Embassy on the day of the takeover by the Iranian students on November 4, 1979 in Tehran. By November 10, three of the diplomats and two of their wives had made their way to the Canadian Embassy. A few weeks later, they were joined by another who had been sleeping on the floor of the Swedish Embassy. Faced with the daunting task of hiding the Americans, Ambassador Kenneth Taylor decided to smuggle them out of Iran on Canadian passports. Canada’s Parliament convened its first secret session since World War II to give permission to issue Canadian passports for the six Americans. The CIA prepared a set of forged Iranian Visas to go with the passports. Disguises and cover stories were invented for a series of scenarios. They eventually used the Hollywood advance crew who were scouting locations for a movie. On January 27, 1980, the American diplomats, now traveling on Canadian passports, boarded a flight for Zurich, Switzerland, leaving from Tehran. The Canadian embassy staff also left and closed the Embassy. The six rescued Americans were: Robert Anders, 34 – Consular Officer, Mark J. Lijek, 29 – Consular Officer, Cora A. Lijek, 25 – Consular Assistant, Henry L. Schatz, 31 – Agriculture Attache, Joseph D. Stafford, 29 – Consular Officer, Kathleen F. Stafford, 28 – Consular Assistant. Ambassador Kenneth D Taylor was awarded the Congressional Gold Medal, approved on March 6, 1980. This Bronze Medal was struck on the authority of Congress by the US Mint after the same design.
USA – President Andrew Johnson Medal – Original United States Mint Mailer – 1865 – Uncirculated – This medal was struck by the United States Mint in Philadelphia sometime in the mid-1960s. It honors the 17th President of the United States, Andrew Johnson, who became president when Abraham Lincoln was assassinated and is in its original US Mint shipping package. The medal has a 3 inch diameter and weighs approximately 7.5 ounces.
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