THE SPINNING WHEEL for
January-February 1963
A Banker Shares His Banks
by MARTIN H. MILLER
For sixty-two years,
Clarence T. Simmons has been collecting coin banks. Now a vice-president
at the Iowa State Bank in Des Moines, he numbers in his collection some
9,500 examples. With few exceptions, all have been gifts from other
bankers throughout the world. His oldest bank is Hall's Excelsior, 1869;
his latest, a space-age rocket.
The tremendous collection is far too large to be exhibited in its
entirety. However, selected portions, including some of the antiques, are
always on display in three cases at the Iowa State Bank. Sometimes old
mechanical banks are shown alone - Mr. Simmons owns about fifty;
sometimes, banks
which have come to him
from a particular state or from some of the seventy- five foreign
countries represented in his collection are displayed. Whatever the
approach, it's all a part of Mr. Simmons' policy of sharing his interest
with appreciative people of all ages and tastes.
Sentimentally Mr. Simmons prizes most the bank that started it all -
an Indian-Shooting-Bear, given him as a boy. He holds it in the two
pictures below. Other mechanicals on the table before him include Stump
Speaker, Teddy and the Bear; 'Spise Dat Mule, Hall's Excelsior, William
Tell, Tammany, and Paddy and Pig.
A rarity of more modern times is a curly birch bank from Finland
which won first prize in a contest during World War II for a bank made
without metal, and which was purchased by a financial house in Norway for
distribution to its customers - the first coin savings bank ever to be so
distributed in that country. Recently a Norwegian banker recognized it
from its markings as the very one which had been displayed at an Oslo
bank.