"It's a welcome gift, believe me," said Maj. George Hood, a national spokesman for the charity, which has seen total donations drop around 25 percent in the tough economy.
People might be plunking in less loose change this season, but the Salvation Army is still coming across exotic kettle donations.
Earlier this month, a rare 1910 gold coin worth thousands was dropped into a kettle in Berlin, Vt. Someone in Uniontown, Pa., deposited a diamond ring worth about $2,000. In northeast Kansas, a gold American Buffalo coin worth at least $1,000 was slipped through a kettle slot.
And every holiday season for the past seven years, someone has dropped a Krugerrand, a gold coin from South Africa, into a kettle in Waterloo, Iowa. The one left last weekend was valued at $678, Hood said.
"It's kind of fun, and it's very helpful to the local units who are able to cash these things in and put the money into the chapter," Hood said.
Nationally, the Salvation Army collects about $118 million a year from its 25,000 red kettles.
As far as the charity knows, the first time a valuable coin was dropped into a kettle was in 1982 in a Chicago suburb. Since then it's happened about 300 times across the country.
It was the third year in a row that a rare Liberty Eagle coin was left in Fort Myers, apparently by the same person, said Megan Spears, a spokeswoman for the local chapter.
Like the two previous years, the coin was in a small plastic case with a note printed neatly on plain, unlined paper: "In memory of Mimi."
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