Flynn-Haislip Coal Company Scrip, 25 cents

Name/Title

Flynn-Haislip Coal Company Scrip, 25 cents

Entry/Object ID

KK.0159

Description

Fort Branch 1049 (Logan) Flynn-Haislip Coal Company B25

Collection

Company Scrip + Tokens

Mintage

Manufacture Method

Struck

Notes

unknown mint

Coin Details

Obverse

Transcription

FLYNN-HAISLIP / (star) / COAL / CO.

Reverse

Transcription

GOOD FOR / * 25 * / - IN - / MERCHANDISE

Currency

Coal Company Scrip

Denomination

25 cents

Dimensions

Diameter

28 mm

Provenance

Provenance Detail

Archaeological Find

Notes

Found in Adkins Fork. Kenny traded the man who worked for the land company, Jack Kelly, there a piece of similar scrip for a rare uncirculated penny with a misprint. There was a house on the left hand fork across from the guard shack at camp branch mining. The house at the head of that fork. St. Joseph's Vaseline bottle found at same site.

Exhibition

Life in the Coal Camps

Interpretative Labels

Label Type

Cultural/Historical Context

Label

Company Scrip In most coal operations, miners were not paid in US dollars, but rather in company money, called scrip. Usually scrip was only redeemable at the company store, preventing miners from spending money outside the company town. Although illegal in the state of West Virginia, most coal companies continued to use scrip to pay their miners until the 1950s. collection of Kenneth King