How were the early commems touted to the public?

Were most commems available only to attendees of the various things commemorated or did they also advertise them?
Newspapers?
Magazines?
Radio maybe?
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Were most commems available only to attendees of the various things commemorated or did they also advertise them?
Newspapers?
Magazines?
Radio maybe?
Comments
newspaper
The Columbian half dollar received "national fanfare" through newspaper articles, ads in newspapers across the US placed by fair officials, and publicity stunts like constructing a 22 foot replica of the Washington Monument out of coins. Unfortunately the Panic of 1893 set in, and paying double face value at a time when a beer cost 5 cents made the whole thing a bit of a flop,
Yep, aware of the Columbians. But what about the Clevelands, Cincinnatis and their ilk?
Newspaper, banks or coin dealer sales brochures.
Now everyone buys from the mint initially, but not then.
All of the "classic commemorates" were sold by distributors/promoters/conmen and other private entities. The US Mint consistently refused to sell direct and even refused to allow members of the Assay Commission to buy coins at conclusion of the pyx event.
Woolworth & coin shops.
Once the ball got rolling in the 1930s, it didn’t take much advertising to draw a collecting audience. Collectors became aware of the new coin, tried to buy them. At the worst, dealers or promoters got a hold of a substantial part of the mintage and charged premium prices. This happened with the Hudson, Cincinnati and the low mintage Boones, Oregon Trail and Texas commemoratives.
I have seen reproductions of ads for the Gettysburg and Antietam celebrations that may have mentioned the souvenir half dollars.
The 1892-1893 Chicago world expo gave birth to a bazillion varieties of commemorative medals. Gate numbers were around 26 million each year. I'm always on the lookout for examples. I just picked up a really nice U.S. Treasury type 1 medal. Peace Roy
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There were several attempts to produce a Centennial commemorative coin (or coins), but Treasury opposed all. They felt it would confuse the public - and there was already plenty of confusion from multiple new designs, metals and counterfeit "nickels."
Many were distributed by a few dealers:
From QDB's "Commemorative Coins of the United States"
https://www.pcgs.com/books/commemoratives/chapter05/2
@kbbpll ..... Hey, I remember five cent beers....as a matter of fact, my Dad and I went to a local bar the last day before they raised the price of draft beer to ten cents....Darn, I am getting old...
Cheers, RickO
Agree there's an amazing number of pieces that were created for the Columbian Expo.
@tmot99 had a great website on the Columbian Expo at http://1893columbianexpo.com but perhaps it can only now be found in the Internet Archive.
It's sad but a large generation of Internet coin websites with lots of information is being lost.
Not sure if there's anything the NNP can do to archive these?
Here's one of my rare pieces for the Illinois Company made by James Murdock Jr. of Cincinnati, cataloged as Eglit-442.