Whitehall, New York sat at the southern terminus of Lake Champlain, making it a minor but genuine commercial node during the Civil War years. E. W. Hall issued this token during the 1862–1864 period when the federal government's hoarding of small silver and even bronze coinage created a near-total vacuum of circulating cents across the Northern states. Merchants filled the gap themselves, and thousands of individual issuers struck copper pieces redeemable at their own counters.
The Fuld NY-985-A-1A attribution places this among the documented Washington County issues. Hall's tokens are not among the common varieties — Whitehall merchants collectively produced in small numbers compared to major urban centers like New York City or Cincinnati.
Whitehall, New York sat at the southern terminus of Lake Champlain, making it a minor but genuine commercial node during the Civil War years. E. W. Hall issued this token during the 1862–1864 period when the federal government's hoarding of small silver and even bronze coinage created a near-total vacuum of circulating cents across the Northern states. Merchants filled the gap themselves, and thousands of individual issuers struck copper pieces redeemable at their own counters.
The Fuld NY-985-A-1A attribution places this among the documented Washington County issues. Hall's tokens are not among the common varieties — Whitehall merchants collectively produced in small numbers compared to major urban centers like New York City or Cincinnati.