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The E-Sylum: Volume 21, Number 49, December 9, 2018, Article 23

LAND LIMITATION, HIT HIM AGAIN COUNTERSTAMPS

Speaking of counterstamps, there are a couple interesting political items in Bob Merchant's current eBay sale worthy of further research. -Editor

LAND LIMITATION Counterstamp

LAND LIMITATION Counterstamp obverse LAND LIMITATION Counterstamp reverse

"LAND / LIMITATION"
1797-Mo-FM Two Reales (KM 91)

Stamped in two arcs, could be from a single punch. The other known example of this countermark (on an 1844 Large Cent) has the same odd relationship between the two arcs.

Potentially a very important token - a forgotten U.S. historical event. Issued in the mid-to-late 1840’s? I recall that someone once wrote an article about this counterstamp.

I have seen an antique pamphlet entitled "A SHAKER'S VIEWS ON THE LAND LIMITATION SCHEME AND LAND MONOPOLY, AND MORMON PERSECUTION". It was published by Frederick W. Evans of Mount Lebanon, NY. This may or may not have anything to do with the countermark, but it’s a pointer for further research.

Brunk L-94.

Dave Bowers submitted some information in an April 2001 E-Sylum article, republished below. -Editor

LAND LIMITATION • 1844 cent • Counterstamped by: National Reform Association advocates. • Location: NY, New York City • Category: Political statement. • Stamped: LAND and LIMITATION, each in a curved logotype punch. • F-15 Land Limitation

{Commentary} Issued by advocates of the National Reform Association (NRA), formed by George Henry Evans from the membership of the Locofocos, National Trades Union, and the Workingmen's Party. On March 13, 1844, a meeting of working people, under the name of National Reform Party, was held in New York City at Chatham and Mulberry streets. A committee was appointed to investigate "a depression of labor, and a social degradation of the laborer."

The committee filed a report which was accepted at the next meeting. The National Reform Association resolved to use the "land question" as the prime element in its political statements, and laid out three objectives:

1. Homestead legislation by the federal government to allow workers and others to acquire public lands free of charge.

2. Legislation to be enacted by various states to exempt land such as farms from seizure in debt collection.

3. Land limitation (precise wording) to restrict the ownership of large amounts of land by wealthy individuals and other entities, so that land would become more easily available to the general population.

In the following year, 1845, the NRG joined with advocates of the Fourierist movement to schedule the first of a series on annual National Industrial Congresses. It is likely that the National Reform Association was also involved in 1844 with the issuance of the VOTE THE LAND / FREE counterstamps (see listing, which reiterates much of the present commentary and adds more). Similar to the LAND LIMITATION counterstamp, it is known on at least one cent (listed below) and on Spanish-American silver two-reales coins (1797 and 1812 in the present instance).

To read the complete lot description, see:
Rare Counterstamp - Forgotten U.S. History Event - "LAND / LIMITATION" (https://www.ebay.com/itm/Rare-Counterstamp-Forgotten-U-S-History-Event-LAND-LIMITATION/132882066657)

To read the earlier E-Sylum article, see:
VOTE THE LAND FREE (https://www.coinbooks.org/esylum_v04n16a07.html)

HIT HIM AGAIN Counterstamp

HIT HIM AGAIN Counterstamp obverse HIT HIM AGAIN Counterstamp reverse

"HIT HIM AGAIN"
1858 U.S. Flying Eagle Cent

This countermark references a very famous historical event in South Carolina history.

"Hit Him Again" are the words inscribed on a cane given by the City of Charleston to Congressman Preston Brooks of South Carolina. The cane was intended to replace the cane that he broke over the back of Charles Sumner in 1856. The famous abolitionist political cartoon was originally done by J.L. Magee, and carried the inscription "Southern Chivalry: Argument vs. Clubs."

Preston Brooks is an entertaining character of American history - despite his being on the wrong side of slavery. During his lifetime, he participated in multiple duels, fisticuffs, was expelled from college (after being suspended twice), held up a jail at gunpoint - only to eventually become a lawyer and U.S. Congressman.

As to his defining event, Brooks assaulted Charles Sumner (Massachusetts senator) in retaliation for the contents of a speech delivered on the floor of the Senate in promotion of Kansas’s entry into the Union as a free state. Brooks took exception to two main points of Sumner’s speech. First, Charles Sumner mocked Senator Butler’s (a relative of Brooks) speech impediment .....

( Search the internet for A LOT MORE INFORMATION on this important historical event !!! )

You can just sense the forthcoming Civil War brewing with this piece ......

Have any other of these coins survived? If you know of one then please tell me. This could be the last survivor!

Brunk H-634.

These look like individually punched letters rather than a logotype punch. That greatly slows the process and limits how many can be made. Has anyone seen another one of these?

A search of the Newman Numismatic Portal found an article written by Greg Brunk in the July/August 2013 NI Bulletin from Numismatics International. -Editor

To read the complete lot description, see:
Rare, Important South Carolina U.S. Political Counterstamp "HIT HIM AGAIN" !! (https://www.ebay.com/itm/Rare-Important-South-Carolina-U-S-Political-Counterstamp-HIT-HIM-AGAIN/132882065485)

To read the Brunk NI Bulletin article, see:
https://nnp.wustl.edu/library/book/521013?page=6

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Wayne Homren, Editor

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