| Volume 72 No. 2 | February, 2026 |
|---|
The March Chatter will be sent either earlier or later than usual. I will build a long trip around the ANA’s NMS in Savannah, Georgia in late February. If I complete most parts by Sunday, February 15, the issue will go out early – otherwise, it should be mailed by Friday, March 6, which is very close to our regular meeting on March 11.
Paul Hybert, editor
The 1284th meeting of the Chicago Coin Club was called to order by President Melissa Gumm at 6:45pm CST on Wednesday, January 14, 2026. This was an in-person and online meeting, with 11 members and one guest present at the CBA and 20 members and one guest online for a total of 33.
Club Meeting Minutes
The December club meeting minutes were approved as published in the Chatter, both in print and on the CCC website.
New Memberships
Secretary Scott McGowan reported no membership application readings.
Treasurer’s Report
Treasurer reports for November and December were not available for review, so tabled until February.
Old Business
New Business
Featured Program
Steve Starlust on Referencing Columbiana. Following the presentation, First Vice President Deven Kane informed Steve he will receive the CCC Speaker’s medal and an ANA Educational Certificate.
Show and Tell
Second Vice President Ray Dagenais announced the seven Show and Tell presentations for the evening.
Upcoming Events
President Melissa Gumm reviewed upcoming numismatic events, with two more mentioned by club members: Will County Coin Club Annual Coin Show on February 22, 2026, from 9:00am - 3:00pm at Joliet Junior College; Early American Coppers (EAC) Convention on April 29 to May 03, 2026, at the Sheraton Charlotte Airport Hotel,Charlotte, North Carolina.
CCC member Drew Michyeta distributed copies of his 3rd edition annual calendar featuring Numismatic images. The 2026 calendar, titled “The Birth of American Liberty as Envisioned by the Medalists,” features 12 months of beautiful obverse and reverse images of medals featuring George Washington, Ben Franklin, and many others. Copies are available at club meetings in person at the CBA while supplies last.
CCC member Larry Edwards offered copies of a publication on Colonial issues, also called pre-federal coinage. Those interested in a copy can email the club secretary to be put in touch with Larry.
President Melissa Gumm adjourned the meeting at 8:39pm CST.
Respectfully Submitted,
Scott McGowan, Secretary
presented by
Steve A. Starlust
to our January 14, 2026 meeting
The evening’s speaker was the author of the recently published Referencing Columbiana, which won the Numismatic Literary Guild’s 2025 award for best Tokens and Medals Reference Book. This book serves as an update to both Eglit’s Columbiana; The Medallic History of Christopher Columbus and the Columbian Exposition of 1893 (1965) and 1963’s So-Called Dollars by Hibler and Kappen.
The Columbian Exposition was the scene of many “firsts.” Steve mentioned many of them, including the Ferris Wheel, Cracker Jack, Hot Dogs, and Pabst Blue Ribbon beer. A 50¢ ride on the Ferris Wheel consisted of two revolutions lasting a total of 20 minutes – each of the 36 passenger cars weighed 19 tons and could carry 60 passengers. Numismatic firsts included Elongated Coins and the first two US Commemorative Coins, a quarter and a half dollar.
Under the main theme of “The Many Medallic Faces of Columbus,” Steve showed many medals depicting Columbus. A wide range of motifs were shown: whether a bust to a full figure, whether stationary or moving, the pieces show a wide range of people. We do not know what Columbus looked like because there are no known life-time paintings or drawings of him! Was he stout or lean? Clean shaven, or bearded and mustached? Was his hair straight or curly, long or short? We do not know for certain, but we likely are familiar with a few of his “classic” renditions. Some artists felt free to use other inspirations for their figures.
On the shown pieces, Columbus is on one side (usually alone, but sometimes with another important figure) while the other side features either an historical scene, a scene from the Expo, or mentions the issuing company or group. The first shown medal features a classic view of Columbus: a fit (maybe stout) man of 40 years, wearing a shirt and cloak over his shoulders, clean shaven, his hair with some waves just reaches his collar, and he wears a cloth hat with raised brim in front and on sides. His name, rendered as CHRISTOPHUS COLOMBUS, provides a clue to its origin (by the French medalist Francois Massonet). The reverse features an aerial view of the Expo grounds.
Another piece of French origin shows a huskier bust in profile, but bare headed, with curly hair, with the name as CHRISTPHORUS COLOMB; the reverse has a legend (in French?) on multiple horizontal lines. A piece by engraver H. Zearing of Chicago features a profiled bust of Columbus somewhat similar to Massonet’s, with the name as CHRISTPHER COLVMBVS; the reverse shows a tri-masted sailing ship riding stylized waves, with the legends in English.
The above medals have diameters from 41 to 50 millimeters. At 102 mm, the Expo’s bronze Recognition Award Medal, designed by Augustus Saint-Gaudens is impressive. The shown piece is special because it uses the Rejected Reverse design – the central male figure features full frontal nudity. The obverse features Columbus stepping onto the rocky shore of the New World, head up and arms spread to the sides as if the winner crossing a finsh line. After the original reverse design and four altered versions were rejected by the US Government, Mint engraver Charles Barber was assigned to design the reverse. That is how the official Recognition Award Medal came to be designed by two rivals. Plaster casts for this medal now are known only in museums, and this medal is believed to be unique.
Some designs seem quirky today. Who thinks of Columbus with a ruffled collar, short hair, and a goatee? Wilhelm Mayer’s pieces feature NATO 1456 and MORTO 1506 (for birth and death years) flanking a youthful half-length image which Steve called elf-like due to the long narrow flaps sticking up from the hat.
More pieces for the Expo were shown, from around the world, in various metals, and with legends in various languages – too many to fit in this article – but Steve’s book shows them and more. Because his book is not an auction catalog, he is free to enhance each image to show the piece as it was when new. The book has sections for special material, as well as stories about merchants that made tokens, and the badges and pins made for specific exhibits and items.
Use of Columbus on medals, tokens, and coins did not end with the Expo in 1893. Starting in 1896, Costa Rica introduced the colón denomination (replacing the one peso denomination). That name is derived from Cristóbal Colón, which is the Spanish rendering of Christopher Columbus. We saw a gold 20 colónes piece; other gold denominations were struck, too. Concluding this presentation was a fob for the Tenth International Congress of Navigation (1905 Milan, Italy) featuring conjoined busts of LEONARDO DA VINCI (background) and CRISTOFORO COLOMBO (foreground).
Steve Starlust can be contacted at stevestarlust@gmail.com to order your own copy of his book, ask a question, or tell of an unlisted piece.
| Chicago Coin Company |
| Harlan J. Berk, Ltd. |
| Kedzie Koins Inc. |
| Classical Numismatic Group |
Items shown at our January 14, 2026 meeting,
reported by Ray Dagenais.
Reminders:
| Date: | February 11, 2026 |
| Time: | 6:45PM CST (UTC-06:00) |
| Location: | Downtown Chicago
At the Chicago Bar Association, 321 S. Plymouth Court, 3rd or 4th floor meeting room. Please remember the security measures at our meeting building: everyone must be prepared to show their photo-ID and register at the guard’s desk. |
| Online: | For all the details on participating online in one of our club meetings, visit our Online Meeting webpage at www.chicagocoinclub.org/meetings/online_meeting.html. Participation in an online meeting requires some advance work by both our meeting coordinator and attendees, especially first-time participants. Please plan ahead; read the latest instructions on the day before the meeting! Although we try to offer a better experience, please be prepared for possible diifficulties. |
| Featured Program: | Richard Hathaway —
A Century of Change: Coinage in France, 1540-1640
This presentation explores the transition of French coinage from holdover practices of medieval times towards early modern standardization. Key reforms under François I and Henri II – including the introduction of mintmarks, dated coinage, and attempts to introduce milled coinage and standardize the royal effigy – reflect the increasing attempts of royal oversight and the growing administrative role of the French state. Despite these innovations, regional variations and sloppy hammered coinage persisted, aided by inflation, mint resistance, and religious civil war, until Louis XIII’s instrumental coinage reform in 1640. The talk will feature many examples of coins from this period and walk through the panoply of royal mints, the most common denominations, key characteristics, and identifying marks. While the focus is mainly on silver and billon coinage of this time period, the same trends and challenges can also be seen in the evolution of copper and gold coins as well. |
Unless stated otherwise, our regular monthly CCC Meeting is in downtown Chicago, and also online, on the second Wednesday of the month; the starting time is 6:45PM CT.
| February | 11 | CCC Meeting - Featured Speaker - Richard Hathaway on A Century of Change: Coinage in France, 1540-1640 |
| February | 22 | Will County Coin Club Show, to be held at Joliet Junior College Annex, 17840 W. Laraway Road in Joliet, Illinois; 9:00am to 3:00pm. |
| February | 26-28 | ANA’s National Money Show at the Savannah Convention Center, Savannah, Georgia. Details at https://www.money.org/NationalMoneyShow |
| March | 11 | CCC Meeting - Featured Speaker - Jeffrey A. Amelse on - A Selection of Coins of Poland and Its Occupiers From Medieval Times Through the Renaissance |
| April | 8 | CCC Meeting - Featured Speaker - to be determined |
| April | 23-25 | 87th Anniversary Convention of the Central States Numismatic Society at the Schaumburg Renaissance Hotel & Convention Center, 1551 North Thoreau Drive, Schaumburg, IL. There is a $15 per day admission charge, a 3-day pass for $30, free for youth (17 and under), and free for CSNS Members. For details, refer to their website, https://www.csns.org/ |
| April | 25 | CCC Meeting - 12pm at the CSNS Convention,
which is held at the Schaumburg Convention Center.
No admission charge for our meeting.
Featured Speaker - to be determined |
| May | 13 | CCC Meeting - Featured Speaker - to be determined |
http://www.ChicagoCoinClub.org/
chatter_editor@yahoo.com
The print version of the Chatter is simply a printout of the Chatter webpage,
with a little cutting and pasting to fill out each print page.
The webpage is available before the Chatter is mailed.
If you would like to receive an email link to the latest issue instead of a mailed print copy,
send an email to chatter_editor@yahoo.com.
You can resume receiving a mailed print copy at any time, just by sending another email.
| |||||||||||||
| |||||||||||||
All correspondence pertaining to Club matters
should be addressed to the Secretary and mailed to:
CHICAGO COIN CLUB
P.O. Box 2301
CHICAGO, IL 60690
Or email the Secretary at
Secretary.ChicagoCoinClub@GMail.com
Payments to the Club, including membership dues,
can be addressed to the Treasurer at the above
street address.
Renewing Members Annual dues are $20 a year ($10 for Junior, under 18). Annual Membership expires December 31 of the year through which paid. Cash, check, or money order are acceptable (USD only please). We do not accept PayPal. Email your questions to Treasurer.ChicagoCoinClub@GMail.com Members can pay the Club electronically with Zelle™ using their Android or Apple smart phone. JP Morgan Chase customers can send payments to the Club via Quick Pay. To see if your Bank or Credit Union is part of the Zelle™ Payments Network, go to https://www.zellepay.com Please read all rules and requirements carefully.
![]() |
Sharing this complete Chatter issue with a friend is simple.
Just let them scan this code into their smartphone!
Or, you can check it out for yourself. |