While you’re out buying gifts for everyone on your nice list, chances are you’ll come across a sure sign that Christmas is fast approaching: A Salvation Army bell ringer and one of their iconic red kettles. Most of us will drop in whatever spare change we can quickly dig out of our pockets as we rush by. But for some passerby, the red kettles present an opportunity to play secret Santa in the most generous ways.
Over the years, substantial red kettle donations from anonymous donors have come in many interesting forms. Here are just a few of the valuable oddities that have filled those red buckets in recent years:
Diamonds are a kettle’s best friend?
2011: A worker at a Salvation Army collection center in Shawnee, Kansas noticed a wadded-up piece of paper lying among the coins and bills. He almost threw it in the trash, but decided to open it to be safe. He was astonished to discover that a solitary diamond had been tucked inside. The identity of the generous donor was never found.
To have and to hold….
2011: An engagement ring and wedding band, along with an appraisal, were tucked inside a dollar bill and anonymously slipped into a red kettle outside a grocery store in Henderson, North Carolina. The donor was never identified.
2014: In Cambridge, Massachusetts, a widow placed her engagement ring and wedding band into a kettle with a note saying that the donation was in honor her late husband, who was a “giver.” Another widow later purchased them from the Salvation Army for $21,000 — far more than their appraised value — and returned the rings to the original donor.
A long lost treasure
2016: In Sebastian, Florida, an unidentified passerby placed a 300-year-old gold escudo directly into the hands of the bell ringer. The coin, worth several thousand dollars, had been recovered off the Florida coast from the wrecks of Spanish treasure ships known as the 1715 Plate Fleet. The donor didn’t want to drop the rare treasure into the kettle because he feared it would get mixed in with the other loose coins.
Cold hard cash
2015: A very generous donor dropped a $10,000 check into a red kettle in Jacksonville, FL.
2014: A mysterious donor dropped bundles of ten $100 bills at a time into kettles all over the Minneapolis area, totaling over $14,000.
Silver Bells (“bars”?)
2015: In Syracuse, New York, The Salvation Army received a donation that was too big to fit into a kettle – a 100-ounce silver bar valued around $1,600. The generous donor wished to remain anonymous and was never identified.
Putting their money where their mouth is
2014: Among the most unusual items found in red kettles so far, Salvation Army spokesmen in both Florida and Missouri reported receiving gold teeth in the same year. An anonymous person put four gold teeth in an Orlando kettle, while another donated a single gold tooth in Kansas City.
Worth their weight in gold
The first time a Salvation Army organization reported a gold coin donation was in 1982, when an anonymous donor dropped a Krugerrand into a red kettle north of Chicago. According to legend, the benevolent donor was a World War II veteran who wanted to give something in return for the charity’s service that he received on the front line. Today, Krugerrands and other types of gold coins show up in the Salvation Army’s red kettles all across the country each year, providing solid gold evidence that there is indeed a Santa Claus. For example:
Since 1998: In Fort Collins, Colorado, a pair of 1-ounce gold Krugerrands were slipped into red kettles by the same anonymous donor for almost two decades. The undercover giver always returned later to The Salvation Army to buy back the coins at $1,000 more than their value. Notes and poems in the same handwriting were often attached to the donations, until 2002 – when the coins were accompanied by a note stating that the decades-long secret Santa had died, but the tradition would be continued yearly by the family in his or her honor. And it hasn’t stopped since.
2018: This year, gold coins worth several thousands of dollars have already been anonymously dropped into Salvation Army kettles around the Chicago metro area, including several Gold American Eagles and Gold Krugerrands.
Which brings us to….
Our December giveaway!
We would love to hear about a unique gifting experience you’ve had during the holiday season. Tell us about a time you enjoyed playing “Santa” to put a smile on a special someone’s face, or received the perfect gift at just the right time from an anonymous giver. We may share a story or two on our Facebook page, as well!
Commenting below will serve as your entry for our December giveaway. Submit your comment (one comment only please) by December 31st, and one winner will be randomly selected on January 1st to receive an Argor-Heraeus 1 gram gold bar! Whether you decide to keep it or play secret Santa with it is up to you!
*(No Scrooges allowed! Inappropriate comments will be deleted and disqualified.)
Margil Maldonado says
Would love to start a tradition of giving silver coins as christmas gifts!
Alexander says
Amazing piece. provident metals no wonder your the best.
Bob says
Another great year. Thanks for the giveaways. Won a silver Canadian a few years ago.
Mike Makowski says
I’ve been giving 1 oz silver American Eagle dollars as stocking stuffers the last few years.
Steven Wood says
Provident Metals is the best!
Aaron Ryall says
Today on new year’s eve we are going to a friends house that has been showing an interest in stacking from listening to me. I am gifting him a silver bar for hosting and to get him started.
Stacey Branham says
This will make a great start to my daughters collection. I think metals are a interesting way to invest in the future and make awesome gifts as well. Just got her a silver round too!
eric schaefer says
i received a NAFC Muskie Silver coin from my sister, beautiful design!
fred sanchez says
Great story. Good idea! I think I’ll leave a couple silver dollars this year in a salvation army too just to give back!
Jerry Cardenas says
Merry Christmas !!!
Andrew Vogel says
Iv never won any giveaway
Ron myers says
I work in as a paramedic and over the years have given out Disney silver coins to pediatric patients during transport or silver eagles to my critically ill adults. Don’t know why I started this but I do.
Art Lashbrook says
Thank you for all you do to help make the world a better place by serving and giving!!!
Andrew Bowman says
The best gift I ever got was when I was 6. It was a bike from my grandma.
Paul Worsham says
I once went to get my morning coffee on the way to work, after paying I noticed that they had handed my a silver certificate instead of a $1 bill. Quite the welcome surprise!
Oleg Dimov says
Happy New Year !
Rick Murray says
a chance at this ,,what a gift..
have a great new year
Brandon Neary says
When my daughters were younger we recorded jingle bells on an old recorder and timed it to go off after a while. We poured sugar all over the kitchen, put cookie crumbs everywhere and made fake reindeer poop on the porch and in the yard. We also dropped a jingle bell beside the last “pile”. The recorder went off and my daughter rushed to try and catch santa, letting the dog out to eat the chocolate covered poo. He projectile pooped a few hours later but was fine. We still have that bell to this day. The easter bunny also destroys the house and we plant jelly beans that turn into lolly pops. You obly have kids once… Happy hollidays.
Krista S. says
I’ve started the tradition of giving my niece and nephews a piece of silver for birthdays and Christmas. My dad used to buy my siblings and I silver Saint-Gaudens rounds from SilverTowne years and years ago, and this feels a bit like carrying on that same tradition.
Keith MacFarlane says
Happy New Year and good luck!
John Baranick says
Would get me into the gold…
JASON L HUSSEY says
Merry Christmas and happy holidays!!
Pete Froeschle says
There’s Gold in them there contest. Yahoo!
Thad says
FOR GOD AND COUNTRY. #WWG1WGA
William Sullivan says
Happy new year and best of luck winning the gold.
W.Rogers says
New B
TIMOTHY BILA says
Would love to win some gold for my 5 month old daughter
Greg T. says
Giving my daughter a (used) car really made her happy this Christmas!
Ernest Comstock says
My mom has taken care of me as a child. So I got her a nice Christmas present a 2018 Australia 200-Coin 1 oz Silver Dragon Mini Monster Box BU. Mom I love you…. Peace, Love and Blessings to all….
Deb says
I wanted to do something special for a friend, who was having a tricky course in life. He asked me to paint a picture of him with his motorcycle. Finally, around Decmeber of 2016, I decided to paint his portrait, but, I told him I would do it big. When I started the picture, I thought I was going the throw paint on the canvas and be done with it. However, I soon realized there was much more to the picture than that. 700 hours and 30 photographs later, his oil painting was complete. I ran with it, and now, two years later, I have another, the same size, of someone else in production, with two more pending. How’s that for giving and receiving? 😀