Christmas

Salvation Army Collects First Gold Coin of Season in Chicago Area

The bell ringers are back, and Salvation Army volunteers armed with their familiar red kettles are getting an early start this year. They’re hoping some new technology can help them reach their goal. NBC 5’s Anayeli Ruiz has the story.

Christmas is around the corner and last week, the Salvation Army was gifted its first gold coin of the season in the Chicago area.

On Nov. 8, an anonymous donor dropped a 1-ounce “Gold Eagle” coin, worth between $1,200 and $1,500, into a red kettle at a Hobby Lobby in Crystal Lake, the Salvation Army said in a statement Wednesday.

“It was very exciting to start the kettle season by finding a gold coin in the very first kettle we processed,” Major Barbara Owen, corps officer at The Salvation Army Crystal Lake Corps Community Center, said.

“This is just one example of the generosity of the people of McHenry County,” Owen said.

The Red Kettle campaign dates back to 1891 in San Francisco, the Salvation Army said. The tradition was brought to the Chicago area about 30 years ago in McHenry County.

The campaign is part of the organization’s larger Christmas fundraising effort for social service programs that include providing shelter, food and after-school programs.

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