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Table medal / paper weight

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    Table medal / paper weight

    Here is a piece that caught my eye.

    It's a new in the box table metal.
    The piece was sold by----
    "Wollenberger & Co"
    105 So. La Salle st.
    Chicago.
    Attached Files

    #2
    The inscription in the bottom of the box reads.

    "In Memory of the great war and your loyalty to the old country."

    The stamp is a US 5 cent stamp. Unfortunately the cancellation
    date is not readable, I am guessing sometime in the mid 1920s.
    Attached Files

    Comment


      #3
      I blocked out the buyers name just in case he or his family
      is still around.

      Comment


        #4
        These are really cool! This is only the second one that I have seen in the original box

        Comment


          #5
          Probably from the thirties. I think the twenties might have been a little early for the "hun" to be commemorating things stateside. In the thirties the German American Bund was in full swing and alot of people admired what was happening in Germany as far as their economic recovery was going.
          pseudo-expert

          Comment


            #6
            I love stuff like this. The stamp itself was issued in 1917 (5 cent George Washington) which of course means nothing.

            http://www.stampcatalogue.org/2008/1...amps-1917.html

            Then I tried to find out about Herman Wollenberger and found the following:

            Wollenberger, Hermann, Banker of 105
            South LaSalle _Street,. was born in 1867, in
            Germany. In 1884-93 he
            was engaged in the bank-
            ing business in Germany
            and Belgium; 1893-6 was
            with the Illinois Trust and
            Savings Bank; and was
            Vice-President of the West-
            ern Trust and Savings
            Bank, until 1908, when he
            organized the banking firm
            of Wollenberger & Co. He is a member of
            the Bankers, Ravisloe Country, Hampden, and
            German Clubs, and Schwaben Verein.

            I found next to nothing on the company itself except there are calendars out there. Likely for customers.

            Then I found this article from 1930

            http://flps.newberry.org/article/5418474_3_1_1172

            There are even FBI case files from 1909 - 1921 but you have to sign up to actually read them.

            http://www.fold3.com/browsemore/hhqJ...yoDswaVMY4R_1/

            So it doesn't answer when this was made but it could even be in the 20s I suppose if there were a lot of German immigrants and that could be possible with inflation in Germany and people trying to get away from the hardships there. A patriotic item for recent immigrants?

            Curt
            Last edited by Curt Steinbach; 03-24-2012, 01:25 AM.

            Comment


              #7
              Thanks Curt.
              That seems to tell us that Wollenberger gave these to his customers.
              Which means we still don't know who made them or where.

              Comment

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