Jamul Indian Village is a federally recognized Kumeyaay community located near San Diego — not historically affiliated with the Pennacook, an Algonquian-speaking confederacy centered in what is now southern New Hampshire and northeastern Massachusetts. That geographical and cultural disconnect is unexplained by the issuing authority's public record, and the coin's existence reflects the broader phenomenon of tribal nations issuing numismatic pieces depicting peoples and histories outside their own, a practice that expanded sharply after IGRA-era economic development in the 1990s opened new revenue streams.
Jamul Indian Village is a federally recognized Kumeyaay community located near San Diego — not historically affiliated with the Pennacook, an Algonquian-speaking confederacy centered in what is now southern New Hampshire and northeastern Massachusetts. That geographical and cultural disconnect is unexplained by the issuing authority's public record, and the coin's existence reflects the broader phenomenon of tribal nations issuing numismatic pieces depicting peoples and histories outside their own, a practice that expanded sharply after IGRA-era economic development in the 1990s opened new revenue streams.