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Fort Vancouver Centennial half dollar

The Fort Vancouver Centennial half dollar, sometimes called the Fort Vancouver half dollar, is a commemorative fifty-cent piece struck by the United States Bureau of the Mint in 1925. The coin was designed by Laura Gardin Fraser. Its obverse depicts John McLoughlin, who was in charge of Fort Vancouver (present-day Vancouver, Washington) from its construction in 1825 until 1846. From there, he effectively ruled the Oregon Country on behalf of the Hudson's Bay Company. The reverse shows an armed frontiersman standing in front of the fort.

Fort Vancouver Centennial half dollar
United States
Value50 cents (0.50 US dollars)
Mass12.5 g
Diameter30.61 mm (1.20 in)
Thickness2.15 mm (0.08 in)
EdgeReeded
Composition
  • 90.0% silver
  • 10.0% copper
Silver0.36169 troy oz
Years of minting1925
Mintage50,028 including 28 pieces for the Assay Commission (35,034 melted)
Mint marksNone, all pieces struck at the San Francisco Mint without mint mark
Obverse
DesignJohn McLoughlin
DesignerLaura Gardin Fraser
Design date1925
Reverse
DesignFrontiersman with Mount Hood in background
DesignerLaura Gardin Fraser
Design date1925

Washington Representative Albert Johnson wanted a coin for Fort Vancouver's centennial celebrations, but was persuaded to accept a medal instead. But when another congressman was successful in amending a coinage bill to add a commemorative, Johnson tacked on language authorizing a coin for Fort Vancouver. The Senate agreed to the changes, and President Calvin Coolidge signed the authorizing act on February 24, 1925.

Fraser was engaged to design the coin on the recommendation of the United States Commission of Fine Arts. The coins were flown from the San Francisco Mint, where they were struck, to Washington state by airplane as a publicity stunt. They sold badly; much of the issue was returned for redemption and melting, and the failure may have been a factor in one official's suicide. Due to the low number of surviving pieces, the coins are valuable today.

Background edit

Fort Vancouver, on the north bank of the Columbia River in what is today Vancouver, Washington, lay across the river from what would become Portland, Oregon. It was founded in 1825 by the Hudson's Bay Company chief factor for the area, Dr. John McLoughlin. The company sought furs and other trade goods, and was in competition with John Jacob Astor's Pacific Fur Company, which had an outpost at what is now Astoria, Oregon. Fort Vancouver was named for the British sea captain George Vancouver,[1] who also gave his name to Vancouver in Canada.[2][3]

Until the Oregon Treaty of 1846 settled the disputed claims of the United States and Britain, McLoughlin was what government there was in the Oregon Country. McLoughlin's word was obeyed by white man and Native American alike, and there were no significant wars there in that time.[4] Fort Vancouver became the trading center for a large area, and the largest settlement west of the Great Plains. With the coming of American rule in 1846, McLoughlin resigned from the Hudson's Bay Company, going to live at Oregon City, which he had founded,[2] and became its mayor in 1851, two years after becoming a U.S. citizen. He died in 1857; a century later, the Oregon Legislature named him the "Founder of Oregon", and Fort Vancouver is now a national historic site.[5]

Legislation edit

The Fort Vancouver Centennial Corporation hoped to sell commemorative half dollars at the planned celebration, and persuaded Representative Albert Johnson of Washington state to introduce legislation in the House of Representatives.[6] In May 1924, he and Senator Wesley Jones, also of Washington state, introduced legislation in their houses of Congress for a half dollar commemorating the centennial of Fort Vancouver. The bills were not given any hearings.[7] Indiana Representative Albert Vestal, the chairman of the House Committee on Coinage, Weights, and Measures, met with Johnson and persuaded him to introduce a bill for a medal instead. Vestal reasoned that the Treasury Department was opposing more commemorative coin issues, as these were finding their way into circulation and confusing the public.[8] On February 3, 1925, Jones introduced a bill for a medal, and on the 12th, Johnson did the same.[9]

Legislation for a Vermont Sesquicentennial half dollar had been introduced by that state's senior senator, Frank Greene, and had passed the Senate.[10] When that bill came to the floor of the House of Representatives on February 16, California Representative John E. Raker moved to amend it to provide for a California Diamond Jubilee half dollar.[11] Vestal asked to be heard in opposition to the amendment, stating that his committee, after recommending the Vermont bill, had decided to promote no further coin bills. He added that because of this, Johnson had agreed to withdraw his bill. The Minority Leader, Democratic Congressman Finis J. Garrett of Tennessee, asked why the committee had not set the rule before considering the Vermont bill, and Vestal admitted it was hard to answer. The House voted, and the amendment was added. Johnson—to applause from his colleagues—moved a further amendment, to add "and Vancouver, Wash."[8] The amendment passed, as did the bill.[8]

Johnson realized that such a simple amendment might not result in a coin being issued. He therefore returned to the House floor soon thereafter, asking that the bill be reconsidered, so he could couch his amendment in the same phrasing as for the other two coins. Once the bill was again being considered, Johnson added his amendment, but Vestal moved that the bill be returned to his committee. Vestal's motion failed, 24 ayes to 67 noes. Lengthy procedural wrangling followed over whether that vote could be objected to because there was no quorum present. Once that was resolved, the House passed the bill again.[12] The bill was returned to the Senate the following day.[13] Kansas's Charles Curtis moved on behalf of Greene that the Senate agree to the House amendments,[14] and though Treasury Secretary Andrew W. Mellon urged President Calvin Coolidge to veto it,[15] the bill, authorizing all three coins, was enacted by the President's signature on February 24, 1925.[16]

Preparation edit

Once the coin had been approved by Congress, the Centennial Corporation submitted plaster models by an unknown artist, whose initials (SB) appeared on the obverse. They were sent to the Commission of Fine Arts, charged by a 1921 executive order by President Warren G. Harding with rendering advisory opinions regarding public artworks, including coins. The models showed McLoughlin on the obverse and the fort stockade with Mount Hood in the background for the reverse. These designs were likely dictated by the Centennial Corporation. On May 22, the Commission rejected the models, describing them as "interesting" but stating that an experienced medalist would be needed. It recommended Chester Beach, but when the corporation tried to hire him, it turned out he was traveling. The corporation instead hired the commission's second choice, Laura Gardin Fraser, an experienced designer of commemorative coins.[17]

Since the Centennial Corporation had decided what design elements it wanted to see on the half dollar, Fraser had to do her own interpretation of the designs SB had essayed. Hired on June 15, she completed her models by July 1, when Louis Ayres, a member of the commission, came to view them. He was enthusiastic, and sent a letter to commission chairman Charles Moore to that effect, writing "the whole coin looks very interesting to me, and I think is mighty good."[18] The models were approved by the commission, and then by Mellon.[18] Dies were prepared at the Philadelphia Mint, then shipped to San Francisco, where the coins were to be struck.[19]

Design edit

 
The coin's obverse depicts John McLoughlin.

The obverse features a portrait of McLoughlin, facing left. The name of his adopted country overarches him, and his name and 'HALF DOLLAR' are below him, with the centennial dates and 'IN GOD WE TRUST' flanking his bust.[4] Fraser had no likenesses of McLoughlin to work with, and what she based her portrait of him on is unclear.[18] It shows him as an older man than the 41 years he was at the time of Fort Vancouver's founding.[19] The reverse shows an armed frontiersman, dressed in buckskins, with the stockade of Fort Vancouver behind him, and Mt. Hood in the distance. The inscription is somewhat broken up, but is intended to be read as 'FORT VANCOUVER CENTENNIAL VANCOUVER WASHINGTON FOUNDED 1825 BY HUDSON'S BAY COMPANY'. Numismatists have debated whether the absence of a mint mark was intentional; it is the only commemorative coin issue struck at Denver or San Francisco that lacks one.[19] The artist's initials, 'LGF', are at lower right on the reverse, on the other side of the circle from the date '1825'.[4]

 
Fort Vancouver in 1841

Anthony Swiatek and Walter Breen, in their 1988 book on commemorative coins, describe Fraser's design as "better than anything [Chester] Beach could have come up with".[19] Cornelius Vermeule, in his volume on the artistry of U.S. coins and medals, deemed Fraser's half dollar "a most acceptable coin".[20] He wrote, "the obverse tries Pisanello's spacing of the lettering and circumscribed roughness of the bust, while the reverse has too much scenery in the background, surrounded by too much lettering. This and the Hawaiian Sesquicentennial coin of 1928 prove that background scenery or geography ought to be omitted from commemorative half dollars".[21]

Production, distribution, and collecting edit

Only 50,000 of the authorized mintage of 300,000 were coined, plus 28 pieces intended to be sent to Philadelphia to be available for inspection and testing at the 1926 meeting of the annual Assay Commission. The minting was done not later than August 1 at San Francisco. As a publicity stunt, the entire mintage (less the 28 assay coins) was flown by air to Vancouver, Washington, by United States Army Air Corps Lieutenant Oakley G. Kelly on August 1; the shipment, including packaging, weighed 1,462 pounds (663 kg). On arrival, the coins were received by Herbert Campbell, head of the centennial commission.[22]

The half dollars were intended to help pay for the centennial festivities in Vancouver.[19] These were held from August 17 to 23, with a highlight being a pageant, "The Coming of the White Man", which was "based on historical fact".[23] The coins were sold at $1 each; several hundred were gilded, diminishing their future value as numismatic specimens; others were kept as pocket pieces, or were spent.[19]

The poor sales caused financial problems and may have caused a suicide, for on August 22, Charles A. Watts, secretary of the Centennial Corporation and described by Campbell as the real force behind the coin, killed himself. The day before he died, he told a meeting of the corporation there were funds enough to pay all debts, and that Fraser was not owed any money. Neither proved to be the case, and unpaid bills totaled $6,000, with no money to pay them. In fact, Fraser's fee of $1,200 was outstanding, and she tried to get paid even with the half dollars, but her bill was unsatisfied until a year later, when she was paid by check. The half dollars were not owned by the corporation, as the Vancouver National Bank had advanced money for them. Sales came to a virtual halt by the end of October. Texas coin dealer B. Max Mehl offered to buy the remainder of the issue at face value, but this was rejected as many people had paid $1 for their coins. A total of 35,034 pieces were sent back to the mint for redemption and melting, leaving 14,966 pieces outstanding.[24] According to Swiatek and Breen, "given the remoteness and exclusively local nature of the celebration, it is surprising that as many as fourteen thousand coins were sold."[19]

A sale of 1,000 coins was made to an executive of the Hudson's Bay Company, and they were placed in the Archives of Manitoba in Winnipeg, Canada. They were stolen in 1982 by a caretaker, who spent them and redeemed some for Canadian currency at a bank. Many wound up in the hands of a coin dealer, who sold them widely. At the time, the coins were worth about US$800 each. Once the theft was realized, the Province of Manitoba filed suit to recover the remaining coins, but a settlement allowed the dealer to retain them.[25]

The coins quickly commanded a premium after their 1925 issue due to their scarcity, rising to $10 by 1928 before falling back to $7 by 1930, in uncirculated condition. They peaked at about $9 during the commemorative coin boom of 1936. They had subsided back to the $6 level by 1940, but thereafter increased steadily in value, rising to $1,600 during the second commemorative coin boom in 1980.[26] The edition of R. S. Yeoman's A Guide Book of United States Coins published in 2017 lists the coin for between $300 and $975, depending on condition.[27] A near-pristine specimen sold at auction in 2014 for $8,225.[28]

References edit

  1. ^ Slabaugh, p. 71.
  2. ^ a b Bowers, p. 182.
  3. ^ "Fort Vancouver National Historic Site". National Park Service. from the original on June 11, 2017. Retrieved July 7, 2017.
  4. ^ a b c Swiatek & Breen, p. 239.
  5. ^ Flynn, p. 183.
  6. ^ Swiatek & Breen, pp. 239–240.
  7. ^ "68 Bill Profile H.R. 9241 (1923–1925)". Retrieved March 30, 2017 – via ProQuest.; "68 Bill Profile S. 3317 (1923–1925)". Retrieved March 30, 2017 – via ProQuest.
  8. ^ a b c 1925 Congressional Record, Vol. 71, Page 3879 (February 16, 1925) (subscription required)
  9. ^ "68 Bill Profile H.R. 12259 (1923–1925)". Retrieved March 30, 2017 – via ProQuest.; "68 Bill Profile S. 4287 (1923–1925)". Retrieved March 30, 2017 – via ProQuest.
  10. ^ 1925 Congressional Record, Vol. 71, Page 2403 (January 24, 1925) (subscription required); "68 S, 3895 Introduced in Senate" (pdf). United States Senate. January 9, 1925.
  11. ^ 1925 Congressional Record, Vol. 71, Page 3878 (February 16, 1925) (subscription required)
  12. ^ 1925 Congressional Record, Vol. 71, Page 3882–3883 (February 16) (subscription required)
  13. ^ 1925 Congressional Record, Vol. 71, Page 3920 (February 17, 1925) (subscription required)
  14. ^ 1925 Congressional Record, Vol. 71, Page 3930 (February 17) (subscription required)
  15. ^ House Committee on Coinage, Weights and Measures (June 5, 1947). "Issuance of Commemorative Coins". p. 6. (subscription required)
  16. ^ Swiatek, p. 207.
  17. ^ Bowers, p. 182; Taxay, pp. v–vi, 107, 110
  18. ^ a b c Taxay, p. 110.
  19. ^ a b c d e f g Swiatek & Breen, p. 240.
  20. ^ Vermeule, p. 172.
  21. ^ Vermeule, pp. 171–172.
  22. ^ Bowers, pp. 182–184.
  23. ^ "The Fort Vancouver Half Dollar". The Numismatist: 543. October 1925.
  24. ^ Swiatek, pp. 156–157.
  25. ^ Swiatek, pp. 157–158.
  26. ^ Bowers, p. 186.
  27. ^ Yeoman 2017, p. 300.
  28. ^ Yeoman 2015, p. 1134.

Sources edit

External links edit

  •   Media related to Fort Vancouver Centennial half dollar at Wikimedia Commons

fort, vancouver, centennial, half, dollar, sometimes, called, fort, vancouver, half, dollar, commemorative, fifty, cent, piece, struck, united, states, bureau, mint, 1925, coin, designed, laura, gardin, fraser, obverse, depicts, john, mcloughlin, charge, fort,. The Fort Vancouver Centennial half dollar sometimes called the Fort Vancouver half dollar is a commemorative fifty cent piece struck by the United States Bureau of the Mint in 1925 The coin was designed by Laura Gardin Fraser Its obverse depicts John McLoughlin who was in charge of Fort Vancouver present day Vancouver Washington from its construction in 1825 until 1846 From there he effectively ruled the Oregon Country on behalf of the Hudson s Bay Company The reverse shows an armed frontiersman standing in front of the fort Fort Vancouver Centennial half dollarUnited StatesValue50 cents 0 50 US dollars Mass12 5 gDiameter30 61 mm 1 20 in Thickness2 15 mm 0 08 in EdgeReededComposition90 0 silver 10 0 copperSilver0 36169 troy ozYears of minting1925Mintage50 028 including 28 pieces for the Assay Commission 35 034 melted Mint marksNone all pieces struck at the San Francisco Mint without mint markObverseDesignJohn McLoughlinDesignerLaura Gardin FraserDesign date1925ReverseDesignFrontiersman with Mount Hood in backgroundDesignerLaura Gardin FraserDesign date1925Washington Representative Albert Johnson wanted a coin for Fort Vancouver s centennial celebrations but was persuaded to accept a medal instead But when another congressman was successful in amending a coinage bill to add a commemorative Johnson tacked on language authorizing a coin for Fort Vancouver The Senate agreed to the changes and President Calvin Coolidge signed the authorizing act on February 24 1925 Fraser was engaged to design the coin on the recommendation of the United States Commission of Fine Arts The coins were flown from the San Francisco Mint where they were struck to Washington state by airplane as a publicity stunt They sold badly much of the issue was returned for redemption and melting and the failure may have been a factor in one official s suicide Due to the low number of surviving pieces the coins are valuable today Contents 1 Background 2 Legislation 3 Preparation 4 Design 5 Production distribution and collecting 6 References 7 Sources 8 External linksBackground editFort Vancouver on the north bank of the Columbia River in what is today Vancouver Washington lay across the river from what would become Portland Oregon It was founded in 1825 by the Hudson s Bay Company chief factor for the area Dr John McLoughlin The company sought furs and other trade goods and was in competition with John Jacob Astor s Pacific Fur Company which had an outpost at what is now Astoria Oregon Fort Vancouver was named for the British sea captain George Vancouver 1 who also gave his name to Vancouver in Canada 2 3 Until the Oregon Treaty of 1846 settled the disputed claims of the United States and Britain McLoughlin was what government there was in the Oregon Country McLoughlin s word was obeyed by white man and Native American alike and there were no significant wars there in that time 4 Fort Vancouver became the trading center for a large area and the largest settlement west of the Great Plains With the coming of American rule in 1846 McLoughlin resigned from the Hudson s Bay Company going to live at Oregon City which he had founded 2 and became its mayor in 1851 two years after becoming a U S citizen He died in 1857 a century later the Oregon Legislature named him the Founder of Oregon and Fort Vancouver is now a national historic site 5 Legislation editThe Fort Vancouver Centennial Corporation hoped to sell commemorative half dollars at the planned celebration and persuaded Representative Albert Johnson of Washington state to introduce legislation in the House of Representatives 6 In May 1924 he and Senator Wesley Jones also of Washington state introduced legislation in their houses of Congress for a half dollar commemorating the centennial of Fort Vancouver The bills were not given any hearings 7 Indiana Representative Albert Vestal the chairman of the House Committee on Coinage Weights and Measures met with Johnson and persuaded him to introduce a bill for a medal instead Vestal reasoned that the Treasury Department was opposing more commemorative coin issues as these were finding their way into circulation and confusing the public 8 On February 3 1925 Jones introduced a bill for a medal and on the 12th Johnson did the same 9 Legislation for a Vermont Sesquicentennial half dollar had been introduced by that state s senior senator Frank Greene and had passed the Senate 10 When that bill came to the floor of the House of Representatives on February 16 California Representative John E Raker moved to amend it to provide for a California Diamond Jubilee half dollar 11 Vestal asked to be heard in opposition to the amendment stating that his committee after recommending the Vermont bill had decided to promote no further coin bills He added that because of this Johnson had agreed to withdraw his bill The Minority Leader Democratic Congressman Finis J Garrett of Tennessee asked why the committee had not set the rule before considering the Vermont bill and Vestal admitted it was hard to answer The House voted and the amendment was added Johnson to applause from his colleagues moved a further amendment to add and Vancouver Wash 8 The amendment passed as did the bill 8 Johnson realized that such a simple amendment might not result in a coin being issued He therefore returned to the House floor soon thereafter asking that the bill be reconsidered so he could couch his amendment in the same phrasing as for the other two coins Once the bill was again being considered Johnson added his amendment but Vestal moved that the bill be returned to his committee Vestal s motion failed 24 ayes to 67 noes Lengthy procedural wrangling followed over whether that vote could be objected to because there was no quorum present Once that was resolved the House passed the bill again 12 The bill was returned to the Senate the following day 13 Kansas s Charles Curtis moved on behalf of Greene that the Senate agree to the House amendments 14 and though Treasury Secretary Andrew W Mellon urged President Calvin Coolidge to veto it 15 the bill authorizing all three coins was enacted by the President s signature on February 24 1925 16 Preparation editOnce the coin had been approved by Congress the Centennial Corporation submitted plaster models by an unknown artist whose initials SB appeared on the obverse They were sent to the Commission of Fine Arts charged by a 1921 executive order by President Warren G Harding with rendering advisory opinions regarding public artworks including coins The models showed McLoughlin on the obverse and the fort stockade with Mount Hood in the background for the reverse These designs were likely dictated by the Centennial Corporation On May 22 the Commission rejected the models describing them as interesting but stating that an experienced medalist would be needed It recommended Chester Beach but when the corporation tried to hire him it turned out he was traveling The corporation instead hired the commission s second choice Laura Gardin Fraser an experienced designer of commemorative coins 17 Since the Centennial Corporation had decided what design elements it wanted to see on the half dollar Fraser had to do her own interpretation of the designs SB had essayed Hired on June 15 she completed her models by July 1 when Louis Ayres a member of the commission came to view them He was enthusiastic and sent a letter to commission chairman Charles Moore to that effect writing the whole coin looks very interesting to me and I think is mighty good 18 The models were approved by the commission and then by Mellon 18 Dies were prepared at the Philadelphia Mint then shipped to San Francisco where the coins were to be struck 19 Design edit nbsp The coin s obverse depicts John McLoughlin The obverse features a portrait of McLoughlin facing left The name of his adopted country overarches him and his name and HALF DOLLAR are below him with the centennial dates and IN GOD WE TRUST flanking his bust 4 Fraser had no likenesses of McLoughlin to work with and what she based her portrait of him on is unclear 18 It shows him as an older man than the 41 years he was at the time of Fort Vancouver s founding 19 The reverse shows an armed frontiersman dressed in buckskins with the stockade of Fort Vancouver behind him and Mt Hood in the distance The inscription is somewhat broken up but is intended to be read as FORT VANCOUVER CENTENNIAL VANCOUVER WASHINGTON FOUNDED 1825 BY HUDSON S BAY COMPANY Numismatists have debated whether the absence of a mint mark was intentional it is the only commemorative coin issue struck at Denver or San Francisco that lacks one 19 The artist s initials LGF are at lower right on the reverse on the other side of the circle from the date 1825 4 nbsp Fort Vancouver in 1841Anthony Swiatek and Walter Breen in their 1988 book on commemorative coins describe Fraser s design as better than anything Chester Beach could have come up with 19 Cornelius Vermeule in his volume on the artistry of U S coins and medals deemed Fraser s half dollar a most acceptable coin 20 He wrote the obverse tries Pisanello s spacing of the lettering and circumscribed roughness of the bust while the reverse has too much scenery in the background surrounded by too much lettering This and the Hawaiian Sesquicentennial coin of 1928 prove that background scenery or geography ought to be omitted from commemorative half dollars 21 Production distribution and collecting editOnly 50 000 of the authorized mintage of 300 000 were coined plus 28 pieces intended to be sent to Philadelphia to be available for inspection and testing at the 1926 meeting of the annual Assay Commission The minting was done not later than August 1 at San Francisco As a publicity stunt the entire mintage less the 28 assay coins was flown by air to Vancouver Washington by United States Army Air Corps Lieutenant Oakley G Kelly on August 1 the shipment including packaging weighed 1 462 pounds 663 kg On arrival the coins were received by Herbert Campbell head of the centennial commission 22 The half dollars were intended to help pay for the centennial festivities in Vancouver 19 These were held from August 17 to 23 with a highlight being a pageant The Coming of the White Man which was based on historical fact 23 The coins were sold at 1 each several hundred were gilded diminishing their future value as numismatic specimens others were kept as pocket pieces or were spent 19 The poor sales caused financial problems and may have caused a suicide for on August 22 Charles A Watts secretary of the Centennial Corporation and described by Campbell as the real force behind the coin killed himself The day before he died he told a meeting of the corporation there were funds enough to pay all debts and that Fraser was not owed any money Neither proved to be the case and unpaid bills totaled 6 000 with no money to pay them In fact Fraser s fee of 1 200 was outstanding and she tried to get paid even with the half dollars but her bill was unsatisfied until a year later when she was paid by check The half dollars were not owned by the corporation as the Vancouver National Bank had advanced money for them Sales came to a virtual halt by the end of October Texas coin dealer B Max Mehl offered to buy the remainder of the issue at face value but this was rejected as many people had paid 1 for their coins A total of 35 034 pieces were sent back to the mint for redemption and melting leaving 14 966 pieces outstanding 24 According to Swiatek and Breen given the remoteness and exclusively local nature of the celebration it is surprising that as many as fourteen thousand coins were sold 19 A sale of 1 000 coins was made to an executive of the Hudson s Bay Company and they were placed in the Archives of Manitoba in Winnipeg Canada They were stolen in 1982 by a caretaker who spent them and redeemed some for Canadian currency at a bank Many wound up in the hands of a coin dealer who sold them widely At the time the coins were worth about US 800 each Once the theft was realized the Province of Manitoba filed suit to recover the remaining coins but a settlement allowed the dealer to retain them 25 The coins quickly commanded a premium after their 1925 issue due to their scarcity rising to 10 by 1928 before falling back to 7 by 1930 in uncirculated condition They peaked at about 9 during the commemorative coin boom of 1936 They had subsided back to the 6 level by 1940 but thereafter increased steadily in value rising to 1 600 during the second commemorative coin boom in 1980 26 The edition of R S Yeoman s A Guide Book of United States Coins published in 2017 lists the coin for between 300 and 975 depending on condition 27 A near pristine specimen sold at auction in 2014 for 8 225 28 References edit Slabaugh p 71 a b Bowers p 182 Fort Vancouver National Historic Site National Park Service Archived from the original on June 11 2017 Retrieved July 7 2017 a b c Swiatek amp Breen p 239 Flynn p 183 Swiatek amp Breen pp 239 240 68 Bill Profile H R 9241 1923 1925 Retrieved March 30 2017 via ProQuest 68 Bill Profile S 3317 1923 1925 Retrieved March 30 2017 via ProQuest a b c 1925 Congressional Record Vol 71 Page 3879 February 16 1925 subscription required 68 Bill Profile H R 12259 1923 1925 Retrieved March 30 2017 via ProQuest 68 Bill Profile S 4287 1923 1925 Retrieved March 30 2017 via ProQuest 1925 Congressional Record Vol 71 Page 2403 January 24 1925 subscription required 68 S 3895 Introduced in Senate pdf United States Senate January 9 1925 1925 Congressional Record Vol 71 Page 3878 February 16 1925 subscription required 1925 Congressional Record Vol 71 Page 3882 3883 February 16 subscription required 1925 Congressional Record Vol 71 Page 3920 February 17 1925 subscription required 1925 Congressional Record Vol 71 Page 3930 February 17 subscription required House Committee on Coinage Weights and Measures June 5 1947 Issuance of Commemorative Coins p 6 subscription required Swiatek p 207 Bowers p 182 Taxay pp v vi 107 110 a b c Taxay p 110 a b c d e f g Swiatek amp Breen p 240 Vermeule p 172 Vermeule pp 171 172 Bowers pp 182 184 The Fort Vancouver Half Dollar The Numismatist 543 October 1925 Swiatek pp 156 157 Swiatek pp 157 158 Bowers p 186 Yeoman 2017 p 300 Yeoman 2015 p 1134 Sources editBowers Q David 1992 Commemorative Coins of the United States A Complete Encyclopedia Wolfeboro New Hampshire Bowers and Merena Galleries Inc ISBN 978 0 943161 35 8 Flynn Kevin 2008 The Authoritative Reference on Commemorative Coins 1892 1954 Roswell Georgia Kyle Vick OCLC 711779330 Slabaugh Arlie R 1975 United States Commemorative Coinage second ed Racine Wisconsin Whitman Publishing ISBN 978 0 307 09377 6 Swiatek Anthony 2012 Encyclopedia of the Commemorative Coins of the United States Chicago KWS Publishers ISBN 978 0 9817736 7 4 Swiatek Anthony Breen Walter 1981 The Encyclopedia of United States Silver amp Gold Commemorative Coins 1892 to 1954 New York Arco Publishing ISBN 978 0 668 04765 4 Taxay Don 1967 An Illustrated History of U S Commemorative Coinage New York Arco Publishing ISBN 978 0 668 01536 3 Vermeule Cornelius 1971 Numismatic Art in America Cambridge Massachusetts The Belknap Press of Harvard University Press ISBN 978 0 674 62840 3 Yeoman R S 2015 A Guide Book of United States Coins 1st Deluxe ed Atlanta Georgia Whitman Publishing ISBN 978 0 7948 4307 6 Yeoman R S 2017 A Guide Book of United States Coins The Official Red Book 71st ed Atlanta Georgia Whitman Publishing ISBN 978 0 7948 4506 3 External links edit nbsp Media related to Fort Vancouver Centennial half dollar at Wikimedia Commons Portals nbsp Money nbsp Numismatics nbsp Oregon nbsp United States nbsp Visual arts Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Fort Vancouver Centennial half dollar amp oldid 1138524118, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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