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Thread: Challenge Coins

  1. #21
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    Quote Originally Posted by Mel1721L View Post
    But you can buy these on ebay, so a challenge coin doesn't really proove anything.
    Very true. Even the rare ones that are given out very selectively can end up on Ebay having been sold off by the original recipient or their heir. I have about 30 challenge coins. Only two were presented to me. The others I've purchased as keeps sakes. They're displayed in my home office and are symbols of many of my past and current affiliations. I've never felt the need to carry any with me, with the sole exception of Thank You for Your Service coins from the American Legion and Veterans of Foreign Wars of the United States. I carry those to give them to members of the armed forces and veterans I meet.

  2. #22
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    Quote Originally Posted by Mel1721L View Post
    But you can buy these on ebay, so a challenge coin doesn't really proove anything.

    It is after all, just an amusement. The way it works in the groups I have been with, the Commanding Officer, Director, Boss, etc, gives out a challenge coin for a job well done. President Obama even has his own coins he gives out.
    Geoff Withnell

    "My comrades, they did never yield, for courage knows no bounds."
    No longer subject to reveille US Marine.

  3. #23
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    Quote Originally Posted by Geoff Withnell View Post
    It is after all, just an amusement. The way it works in the groups I have been with, the Commanding Officer, Director, Boss, etc, gives out a challenge coin for a job well done. President Obama even has his own coins he gives out.
    The recipients of those, if challenged,.....will never have to buy a drink again.
    [I][B]Nearly all men can stand adversity. If you really want to test a man’s character,
    Give him power.[/B][/I] - [I]Abraham Lincoln[/I]

  4. #24
    Mel1721L is offline Registration terminated at the member's request
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    Quote Originally Posted by djstaehlin View Post
    Very true. Even the rare ones that are given out very selectively can end up on Ebay having been s
    off by the original recipient or their heir. I have about 30 challenge coins. Only two were presented to me. The others I've purchased as keeps sakes. They're displayed in my home office and are symbols of many of my past and current affiliations. I've never felt the need to carry any with me, with the sole exception of Thank You for Your Service coins from the American Legion and Veterans of Foreign Wars of the United States. I carry those to give them to members of the armed forces and veterans I meet.
    I never carry any of mine they are extremely rare amongst British Armed Forces and veterans, so the chance of ever meeting someone with one, even if I still lived in the UK would be on a par to winning the lottery.

  5. #25
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    The coins, whether one chooses to carry one or not, can be fun to collect, though. Four or five additional coins have been added since the pic was taken, but this rack is on the wall of my living room.

    Challenge Coins.jpg
    KEN CORMACK
    Clan Buchanan
    U.S. Coast Guard, Retired
    Cuyahoga Falls, Ohio, USA

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  7. #26
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    I never really knew the background behind the challenge. Interesting because earlier in the year I got an e-mail at work that a coworker was ordering them and did I want in on the order. I thought about it but finally decided that it was more something for that coworkers division than mine.

    I do have one, it was given to me by a complete stranger that I found myself drinking with at a Scottish festival. He and I were talking over single malts and discovered we had been involved at different phases of the same operation at an emergency scene and he took the coin from his sporran and gave it to me. I have never seen him again but I also missed the next two years of that festival, only returning this year. Because of the fact that I do not know how this one was made, ordered or given out (except my own story) I can honestly not see anyone ever questioning me on the issue, nor can I see my possession of the coin as proof of where I was or what I did.

  8. #27
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    When I was in the Marine Corps, way back when, we viewed such things as Challange Coins to be an Army thing. We felt that as Marines, we did not need anything to prove we were Marines. One Marine would never think of challenging another Marine. If you had a token of a unit with who you were in combat with you may have had a cigarette lighter with the unit crest and dates on it. You would not 'challange' anyone with it but simply lay it on a bar in plain sight for all to see. These were never commented on but may be recognized with the offer of a drink.

    Later in the Army we had many things which we called "Gimmies". These included stickers, patches, plaques, mugs and coins. Each had our unit emblem on them and were given to our hosts whenever we visited somewhere.
    For example, if we flew into a civilian airfield and bought fuel we would give the guys a sticker or coin as a way of saying thanks. They could then display these on a window or a rack in their place of business.
    Much like Police Officers or Firemen trade patches or badges when visiting another Station.

    The name 'Gimmies" came to mean any item of small monetary value that you give away as a souvenir.

    For a more significant gift, say to a host who went above or beyond to make us welcome, or provided some extra or valuable service, we would present them with a plaque or mug. Some of these cost hundreds of dollars and became something which the recipient could display with pride in their office.

    So to me Challenge Coins are a small token presented to someone as thanks or out of respect.
    Steve Ashton
    Forum Owner

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  10. #28
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    Quote Originally Posted by Steve Ashton View Post
    So to me Challenge Coins are a small token presented to someone as thanks or out of respect.
    And that's exactly what legend and accepted apocrypha says their original purpose was. It was only later, that the "challenge" aspect came into being.
    KEN CORMACK
    Clan Buchanan
    U.S. Coast Guard, Retired
    Cuyahoga Falls, Ohio, USA

  11. #29
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    I have heard of the Challenge coin thing before, I have one I believe it to be an Operation Olive Harvest coin (not sure, I'd have to look). However I got it in 2009 and have never needed to carry it or felt the need to produce it.

    It was explained to me (Very briefly) as a U.S. Military thing so I've never felt the need to carry mine. I like the idea of an Xmarks coin, anything to claim a free drink while meeting fellow kilties.
    The hielan' man he wears the kilt, even when it's snowin';
    He kens na where the wind comes frae,
    But he kens fine where its goin'.

  12. #30
    Mel1721L is offline Registration terminated at the member's request
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    Quote Originally Posted by unixken View Post
    The coins, whether one chooses to carry one or not, can be fun to collect, though. Four or five additional coins have been added since the pic was taken, but this rack is on the wall of my living room.

    Challenge Coins.jpg
    You may be interested in these: http://www.awardmedals.com/challenge...c-628_629.html

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