Fastcoin

Numismatics and the Electronics Age (1986)

Years ago growing up as a poor young boy in Pennsylvania, I would often fantasize about having a magic carpet or a time machine to go back to a world long gone.
 
 A time machine or a magic carpet would be the vehicle to transport me back to the Civil War which has been and always will be one of my favorite times in history.
 
 On my 15th birthday, my Aunt Elaine gave me three Civil War Tokens. Suddenly I woke up. Here was my magic carpet that I had fantasized all these years. The coins are a magic carpet. Holding them in your hand, you can fantasize about that moment in time. You can go back to 1864 and try to imagine what life was like without the computer, without the automobile, running water, electricity and all the thousands of things we have come accustomed to that we take for granted.
 
 What can you see around you today that you can look at, hold in your hand that was there in 1864? The coin becomes much more than a coin. It becomes a magic carpet. It is history you can hold in your hands. It was there in 1864 and you can be there in 1864.
 
 Just imagine for a few moments what life was like in 1864. The Civil War was drawing to a close, a war during which we lost almost 500,000 men and divided brother against brother, The loss of life is even more dramatic when you put into prospective that the population of the United States during the Civil War was only 22 million. So a loss of life of 500,000 men on both sides was huge in relationship to the population. I still have the Civil War token in my hands as I am going back and taking you back with me in time on our magic carpet.
 
 I find coins and history intertwined. This Civil War token that I still have in my hand continues to allow me to have an insight what was taking place. The United States at that time had few large cities, mostly rural farmland where the main industries consisted of farming and agricultural, raising cattle, mining, building of railroads and transportation of goods and products. The average soldier that fought in the Civil War, at least on the northern side that I have researched, was paid between $12 and $20 a month. So a penny or a Civil War token was actually very valuable and could actually buy something.
 
 Find some coins that interest you, some history you can hold in your hand and climb aboard your own magic carpet as I did.

baycommando
counterfeiting has become ever more a skillcraft of the unscrupleous catch me if you can hi tech enemy governments . any country with an autopaint factory can extract the paint colors to print money . recently folks in Vanceboro North Carolina ( small time crooks ) with a meth problem were caught running off American notes with the famous Hewlett Packard printer . some counterfeiters bleech the 5 dollar sheets and roll over 100 dollar denominations on the bleeched U.S. treasury paper . now a days ; folks should be prepared with a counterfeit detector pen at the flea markets . the sercret service must be going crazy trying to stop the tide of counterfeit money . water marks can be crudely imposed on paper and so the watermark is not always the perfect tell tale sign the note is a good U.S. instrument of debt . when George Bush visited Australia ; the Prime Minister probably encouraged him to opt for the more colorful money , water marked and embedded with an authenticity stipe verticle length wise center of the note . even since maybe 1950 ; when the Diners Club card came out ; America and the world have been steering more towards a clashless electronic money means of barter . electronic money might be a way to escape counterfeit notes . cyber security is a total concern for the banking systems of the world . hacking and hijacking of accounts have to be prevented . image some brave new world ' where Goldfinger drains the treasury of some nation . the computer age is accelerating into a demension ; we of today may not easily recognise . we are approaching Singularity . Artificial intelligence matches human intelligence in the yr 2029 ... 12 years from now . since Intel silicone chip of 1980 ; the computing power has been increasing exponentially by 10 each yr . we are approaching a very new world . another world as being experiment today ; a world of the merging of the human brain incorporated with the cyber brain . will we adapt ? will we surpass or end up culled ? t
Apr-02-07 19:39:58 PDT Report this comment
marsdenda
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Aug-31-07 11:18:43 PDT Report this comment
scanner15
Indeed, the history of the world can be followed through coins. I try to educate my kids about the rise and fall of empires and the debasement of currencies which ultimately led to their downfall. While In Joel's shop this weekend, we obtained a 1962 silver quarter that bought a gallon of gas in 1962 and now (since it is 90% silver)still buys a gallon of gas. Fascinating economic lesson and shows what our government has done and how it has brought us to this point.

Jeff Brack
May-26-08 07:23:25 PDT Report this comment

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