1 Cent - Food Stamp (Central City Supermarket) ND (1975-1978) front 1 Cent - Food Stamp (Central City Supermarket) ND (1975-1978) back
1 Cent - Food Stamp (Central City Supermarket) ND (1975-1978) photo
© C. Hay (CC BY-NC-SA)

1 Cent - Food Stamp Central City Supermarket ND

 
Plastic 6.1 g 29 mm
Description
Location
United States
Period
Federal republic (1776-date)
Type
Business tokens › Food stamp tokens
Years
1975-1978
Value
1 Cent 0.01 USD = EUR 0.0095
Currency
Dollar (1785-date)
Composition
Plastic
Weight
6.1 g
Diameter
29 mm
Thickness
1.9 mm
Shape
Round
Orientation
Variable alignment ↺
Updated
2024-11-14
References
Numista
N#99780
Rarity index
97%

Reverse

Text

Script: Latin

Lettering:
FOOD STAMP CREDIT

IN ELIGIBLE FOODS

Edge

Plain

Comment

From the 1930s onward, food coupons were available to individuals and families whose income was below a certain level. In the 1960s the lowest value "food stamp" was 50 cents. About 1970 that value was eliminated and one dollar was the lowest value coupon. By law, stores weren’t allowed to give real money in change for food coupons, but the government provided no means to solve this problem. As a result, each store came up with its own method. Some stores had plastic tokens made. The earlier plastic tokens came in sets of four values -- 1, 5, 10, and 25 cents. When the 50 cent coupon was discontinued, stores began using five-piece sets that included a 50 cent token. The vast majority of these five-piece sets are in a standard format -- 29mm with a common reverse reading: FOOD STAMP CREDIT / (value) / IN ELIGIBLE FOODS. The colors were also standard: 1c black, 5c green, 10c blue, 25c orange, 50c pink.