{"product_id":"1922-liberty-dollar-pontiac-money-clip","title":"1922 Liberty Dollar Pontiac Money Clip","description":"\u003cp\u003eA sterling silver money clip featuring a solid silver Peace Dollar from 1922. The U.S minted, Peace Dollar coin mounted into the center in superb condition.  The clip itself is a classic sprung clip where the cash or cards can be inserted behind the coin. This wonderful piece of American history has an additional element that adds its collectability and desirability into the automative collecting sphere. The clip was made as a piece of early advertising for the Pontiac Motor Company.\u003c\/p\u003e\n\u003cp\u003ePontiac’s story is one of America’s most interesting brand arcs, a division that spent decades balancing everyday accessibility with real performance intent. Born in 1926 as a companion to Oakland within General Motors, Pontiac quickly became a volume driver and an identity of its own. By the postwar years it was carving out a reputation for clean, optimistic styling, then accelerating into the muscle era with cars that are now part of the collective memory, particularly the GTO, Firebird, and Trans Am. The brand ultimately could not outrun the late-2000s crisis, and GM discontinued Pontiac in 2010.\u003c\/p\u003e\n\u003cp\u003eWhat makes Pontiac so compelling is how often it managed to feel slightly sharper than the mainstream, even when sharing corporate bones. In the 1960s and 1970s, Pontiac leaned into a confident design language and spirited engineering that made the cars feel aspirational without drifting into untouchable territory. The GTO helped define the muscle car template, while the Firebird evolved into a long-running symbol of American performance with a more personal, driver-forward character than many of its peers. Later decades brought unevenness, but also flashes of the old spark in models like the Grand Prix, the turbocharged and supercharged experiments, and the late reinvention attempts that hinted at what a modern Pontiac could have been.\u003c\/p\u003e\n\u003cp\u003eAs for the logo found on the clip, it is Pontiac’s “Odawa chief”. The brand's identity sits at the intersection of brand mythology, place, and period design. The division took its name from Chief Pontiac, an Odawa leader associated with the 1763–1766 conflict commonly called Pontiac’s War, and that name also aligned with the city of Pontiac, Michigan.  From the outset, GM leaned into this association visually, using a Native American chief profile and headdress imagery as an emblematic shorthand for the brand.\u003c\/p\u003e\n\u003cp\u003eThe earliest decades made that motif part of Pontiac’s face in a literal way. The chief head appeared in badging and ornaments and remained a recognisable brand symbol into the mid-1950s. A Native American headdress logo was used until 1956, after which Pontiac began transitioning away from the earlier profile imagery.  This change was not just cosmetic. It reflected a broader shift in how Detroit was modernising brand identities, trading figurative heritage symbols for cleaner, more abstract marks.\u003c\/p\u003e\n\u003cp\u003eThat evolution culminated in the famous red arrowhead, often called the “Dart.” Sources describe the arrowhead as replacing the earlier chief imagery and becoming the emblem most people now associate with Pontiac, with the arrowhead design firmly established by the late 1950s and prominently used on the 1959 cars.  Looked at through a collector’s lens, it reads like a tidy timeline of American branding. A romantic origin symbol gives way to a sharper, performance-coded icon, while still nodding to the name’s Indigenous roots. Today, that earlier chief logo remains a potent piece of automotive ephemera, historically meaningful, aesthetically distinctive, and inseparable from the era that produced it.\u003c\/p\u003e\n\u003cp\u003eFor collectors, Pontiac sits in a sweet spot where nostalgia and legitimacy overlap. The best examples reward the same eye you would bring to any great object. Originality, spec correctness, and honest condition matter more than hype. A well-kept GTO or a properly documented Trans Am is not just a fast car. It is a snapshot of a particular American confidence, when design and performance were allowed to be expressive, even playful. Pontiac’s legacy is not only what it built, but the feeling it chased. Accessible excitement, delivered with a badge that still means something to people who grew up hearing that unmistakable V8 promise.\u003c\/p\u003e\n\u003cp\u003eThe Peace dollar is one of the most symbolically loaded coins the United States ever put into circulation, a silver statement piece minted to close the book on World War I and gesture toward a more hopeful modern era. Struck in 90 percent silver with a diameter of 38.1 mm, it carries a serene Liberty on the obverse and an eagle at rest on the reverse, the word PEACE placed with deliberate clarity. The design is credited to Anthony de Francisci, and the series is most commonly associated with the main production run of 1921–1928 and the later return in 1934–1935.\u003c\/p\u003e\n\u003cp\u003eIts origin story is unusually direct. After the war, there was public and numismatic momentum for a new silver dollar that would memorialise peace rather than military victory. The 1921 issue arrived in dramatic high relief, beautiful, bold, and technically challenging, which helped push the Mint toward a lower-relief revision for the following years. The result is a coin that feels both classical and distinctly early 20th century, with Liberty rendered as calm confidence rather than theatrical grandeur.\u003c\/p\u003e\n\u003cp\u003eIn collecting terms, the Peace dollar sits in a satisfying middle ground. It is historic without being remote, iconic without being untouchable. The early high-relief 1921 coins and select lower-mintage dates draw the most attention, but the broader series rewards collectors who care about surface, strike, and honest originality. It is also a coin that wears its meaning well. Even a modest example still communicates the intention behind the design. A compact object made for commerce that ended up carrying a national mood.\u003c\/p\u003e\n\u003cp\u003eThis clip is a great talking point for so many reasons and appeals on so many levels. It is hard to think of a more appealing piece of American history wrapped into on item.\u003c\/p\u003e\n\u003cp\u003eMade in America. Circa 1930's\u003c\/p\u003e","brand":"Cartier","offers":[{"title":"1.72 \/ 2.29","offer_id":45643949801662,"sku":"FWMJ2502","price":265.0,"currency_code":"USD","in_stock":false}],"thumbnail_url":"\/\/cdn.shopify.com\/s\/files\/1\/0689\/2617\/files\/0016-1_d845476d-eeac-4c0a-a4b4-004fa189bd1b.jpg?v=1764511622","url":"https:\/\/foundwell.com\/products\/1922-liberty-dollar-pontiac-money-clip","provider":"Foundwell","version":"1.0","type":"link"}