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| Issuer | Prisoner of War Camp Canteen, Como, Mississippi |
|---|---|
| Year | 1943-1945 |
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| Composition | Log in to see details |
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| In circulation to | Yes |
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| Obverse description | Log in to see details |
|---|---|
| Obverse lettering | PRISONER OF WAR CAMP CANTEEN COMO, MISSISSIPPI NOT GOOD IF DETACHED 10 CENTS |
| Reverse description | Completely unprinted, the reverse presents a plain buff-coloured paper surface with no text, vignette, or overprint of any kind. |
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| Comments |
Como was a small town in Panola County, Mississippi, and during the war its POW camp held Axis prisoners — predominantly German — working in the cotton fields under the US Army's Enemy Prisoner of War program. Camp canteen scrip like this was a practical necessity: Geneva Convention rules required that prisoners receive pay for their labor, but US authorities were understandably reluctant to put standard currency into camp circulation. Locally produced scrip, redeemable only at the camp canteen, satisfied the treaty obligation while containing the money within the wire.
Most Mississippi camp issues were printed under improvised conditions, often by local job printers with no experience producing currency. The Cambridge reference for this piece suggests it has been documented and attributed, but Como camp material surfaces rarely enough that provenance tends to be established through camp records rather than numismatic pedigree.