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When was the last chop mark made?

WeissWeiss Posts: 9,942 ✭✭✭✭✭
edited August 25, 2017 3:00PM in U.S. Coin Forum

I know it's a little darkside, but I think our chop experts tend to gravitate to US pieces.

I thought I'd seen this discussion here before, but I couldn't find it researching past threads.

It seems like it's a matter of the culture of chopmarks as well as the availability of coins which could be chopped.

The use of chops or punches was in (perhaps slow) decline by the early 20th century and came to a definite end no later than Mao's emergence and his appetite for iron and steel (which I believe is one of the reasons few if any authentic punches remain today).

At the same time, the number of new large silver coins worthy of chopping likely came to an end, possibly in part because of the great depression, in the late 1920s and early 1930s. For example, China released the two year Sun Yat-Sen "Junk" dollar series in 1933 and 1934. Similarly, we (the US) concluded the Peace dollar release in 1935 and would never really release another silver "crown".

Interestingly, America struck 30 million 1934-dated of these Junk dollars in 1949. So, theoretically, a chopmarked 1934-dated Sun Yat-Sen Junk dollar could have been chopped as late as 1949--or even later.

I picked up this 1933-dated Junk dollar from NEN just now because it was the latest one I'd seen. What's the latest, "authentic", genuinely of the era chopped silver piece we know of?

We are like children who look at print and see a serpent in the last letter but one, and a sword in the last.
--Severian the Lame

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