Posted on 05/23/2008 4:25:47 PM PDT by SandRat
WASHINGTON, May 23, 2008 Searching for a tangible way to help Americans express their deep gratitude to servicemembers for their sacrifices, a Tampa, Fla., couple has designed their own challenge coin.
The Bensons are doing just that with their organizations new coins. The tangible thank you bears the five service insignia on one side and the phrase Thank you for your service from a grateful American on the other. Grateful American coins are available for purchase from the organizations site. While purchasers are presenting them to veterans with a heartfelt thank you, something theyve done 2,894 times since December, the net proceeds from their purchase are being donated to the Special Operations Warrior Foundation and Americas Vet Dogs. Both organizations support Americas wounded servicemembers. Our goal is to write our first checks to these two organizations on our one-year anniversary in November, Benson said. Grateful American Coin is a supporter of America Supports You, as are its two beneficiary organizations. America Supports You, a Defense Department program, connects citizens and companies with servicemembers and their families serving at home and abroad. The America Supports You [relationship] means a lot to our organization, Benson said. [It] assists with credibility for our young organization while at the same time assisting with exposure for our program. The work America Supports You does is valuable and needed for organizations like Grateful American Coin, she added. Military challenge coins, typically bearing a units insignia, date back to World War I. Legend has it that a coin identifying the squadron of a pilot shot down and captured behind enemy lines saved him from being executed by the French as a spy. He provided his coin, the only personal property his enemy captors hadnt confiscated, as proof of his identity. |
Related Sites: Grateful American Coin America Supports You |
Best regards,
Thanks for the info. I only recently heard of these things. I occasionally post strips from "Air Force Blues" over in the Canteen thread, and they have a memorial challenge coin available over there, too.
(funny thing is that I just stumbled across that strip -- it's not like anyone in my family was in the Air Force)
Glad to help.
While I like the idea of a commemorative coin, I dislike the modernist look. There are several concepts that might be blended to produce a series of truly unique coins that have a deeper meaning.
To start with, the Canadian gold Maple Leaf is distinguished as a coin, because it is engraved with a 3D hologram. As such, it should remain encased, lest the 3D effect is ruined.
But I can see such 3D engraving on silver coins as being very stylish. Especially if they were the size of Eisenhower dollars.
On the obverse, instead of national symbols, I can imagine a series of the great American Admirals and Generals. Perhaps 100 different coins, including:
MacArthur, Sherman, John Paul Jones, Patton, Nimitz, Zumwalt, Nathanael Greene, James Longstreet, Robert E. Lee, Winfield Scott Hancock, Stonewall Jackson, George C Marshall, Omar Bradley, Norman Schwarzkopf, John J.”Black Jack” Pershing, William Halsey, David Farragut, Raymund Spruance, Oliver Hazard Perry, Charles A. Lockwood, Chesty Puller, Daniel V. Gallery, Marc Mitscher, Jimmy Doolittle, Billy Mitchell, Commodore Stephen Decatur Jr, Matthew Ridgway, William Westmoreland, Henry H. “Hap” Arnold, Creighton Abrams, Joseph Stilwell, Philip Sheridan, James H. Wilson, George H. Thomas, the US Presidents who were generals, etc.
While there are those who would want individual coins, a complete collection, briefly annotated, would be worth a fortune for its historical value alone. It would be the ultimate military gift and would fill up a wall.
The reverse side could have a brief annotation in small print.
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