Tokens, Transportation

 

Transit tokens in the United States date to 1831, when brass coins were minted for John Gibbs’s U.S.M. stage in New Jersey. Horsecar tokens were issued more widely in the 1830s, as were tokens for horse-drawn omnibuses. By 1897, the U.S. had its first subway in Boston, and in 1904 the New York subway system was inaugurated. Tokens were also produced for ferries, buses, and streetcars, often out of cheap white metal, aluminum, or more costly bronze. One characteristic of many, but certainly not all, transit tokens is that they often feature cutouts, sometimes in the shapes of letters, to differentiate them at a glance from other coins.

 

Broward County Transit

009 (10) 010 (10)

Clearwater

009 (8) 010 (8)

Coral Gables

009 (4) 010 (4) 009 (5) 010 (5) 009 (7) 010 (7)

Daytona Beach

009 (9) 010 (9)

Ft. Lauderdale

009 (2) 010 (2) 009 (3) 010 (3)

Ft. Pierce

009 (11) 010 (11)

Florida Ferry Co.

011 (13) 012 (13)

Jacksonville

009 (12) 010 (12) 009 (13) 010 (13) 009 (14) 010 (14) 009 (15) 010 (15) 009 (16) 010 (16) 009 (17) 010 (17) 009 (18) 010 (18) 009 (19) 010 (19) 009 (20) 010 (20)

Miami

009 (21) 010 (21) 011 (2) 012 (2) 002 (2) 003 (2) img359 (2) img360

Orlando

011 (3) 012 (3)

Pensacola

009 (6) 010 (6) 011 (4) 012 (4)

Pinellas County

011 (5) 012 (5)

St. Augustine

011 (6) 012 (6)

St. Petersburg

011 (7) 012 (7)

Tampa

011 (8) 012 (8) 011 (9) 012 (9) 011 (10) 012 (10)001 (12) 002 (12)

Treasure Island

011 (11) 012 (11) 011 (12) 012 (12)

West Palm Beach

011 (14) 012 (14) 011 (15) 012 (15) 011 (16) 012 (16)

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