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1 Cent - Hamideh Super Mart Chicago, Illinois

Issuer Hamideh Super Mart
Year
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Currency Dollar (1785-date)
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Obverse description Yellow paper with a fine crosshatch underprint throughout. The face is framed by an ornate letterpress border with scrollwork corner devices, each bearing the denomination "1c" in circular cartouches. A central oval vignette carries a figure of Justice, flanked by a circular scales-of-justice roundel at left. The denomination "ONE CENT" appears at right in bold type.
Obverse lettering 1C 1C
FOOD STAMP CREDIT SLIP
Redeemable Only in Eligible Foods at
HAMIDEH SUPER MART
5532 South Ashland
Chicago, Illinois
ONE CENT
Not Redeemable in U.S. Currency
ONE CENT CREDIT SLIP
1C 1C
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Comments

Hamideh Super Mart was one of thousands of small ethnic grocery retailers operating in Chicago during the late twentieth century that issued their own scrip to handle fractional change — a practice with roots in the Depression-era "trade tokens" of the 1930s but which persisted quietly in immigrant-owned retail well into the 1990s. Private merchant scrip of this type occupied a legal gray area: not technically currency, but functionally used as such within a single store or small neighborhood network.

Paper cent scrip from individual grocers is almost never formally cataloged, and surviving examples are genuinely uncommon — not because they were rare in issue, but because nobody kept them.

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