New Zealand | |
Value | 2½s (£NZ) |
---|---|
Mass | 14.14 g |
Diameter | 32 mm |
Edge | Milled |
Composition | 1933–1946: 50% silver, 50% quaternary alloy 1947–1965: cupronickel (75% copper, 25% nickel) |
Years of minting | 1933–1965 |
Obverse | |
Design | Crowned bust of George V |
Designer | Percy Metcalfe |
Reverse | |
Design | The coat of arms of New Zealand, surrounded by Māori carvings. |
Designer | George Kruger Gray |
The half-crown is the largest of five denominations of New Zealand pound coinage first issued in 1933. Introduced due to shortages of comparable British silver coinage following the devaluation of the New Zealand pound relative to the pound sterling, the coin measures roughly 32 mm (1.3 in) in diameter. It was equal to thirty pence, two and a half shillings, or an eighth of a pound.
Designed by George Kruger Gray, the coin's reverse features the New Zealand coat of arms surrounded by Māori wood carvings. Quickly approved by design committees in Britain and New Zealand to resolve the local currency shortage, the coin was the first denomination of New Zealand coinage to enter circulation. It was initially struck by the Royal Mint in .500 fineness silver, but was produced in cupronickel from 1947 onward. A commemorative issue, celebrating the centennial of the Treaty of Waitangi, entered circulation in 1940.
British half-crowns first circulated in New Zealand during the early 19th century alongside various other silver coinage, including American, Spanish, French, and Dutch issues alongside other British silver denominations. The British pound sterling was confirmed as legal tender in 1858, [1] but had in effect been the sole circulating currency since 1847. [2] Gold half sovereigns, equivalent in value to ten shillings, entered production in Australia in the 1850s, and were made legal tender (although they would not be legal tender within the United Kingdom itself until 1864). [3] Widespread circulation of the Australian silver coinage in New Zealand began in 1930, when Australia devalued the Australian pound relative to the pound sterling. Large amounts of the devalued Australian currency began to flood into New Zealand, eventually making up 30–40% of all coinage in circulation by early 1933. The counterfeiting of silver coins also increased during this period. [4]
New Zealand followed in devaluing the New Zealand pound in 1933, triggering mass smuggling of silver coinage to Britain and its other colonial possessions. After several decades of proposals, the New Zealand government pursued the creation of a domestic coinage the same year. [5] The Coinage Act 1933, outlined the weights and sizes of the six denominations of New Zealand silver coinage, defining the shilling as a coin with a weight of 5.66 grams (0.200 oz). [6] The shilling was worth twelve pence or half a florin. Although domestic firms offered to produce the coinage, the New Zealand government deemed that domestic facilities were not sufficient for mass production, and contracted with the Royal Mint for minting. [7]
All coinage obverses from the initial 1933 issue featured a crowned bust of George V designed by Royal Mint designer Percy Metcalfe, initially for use on the Southern Rhodesian pound. This was based on an older crowned bust by Australian sculptor Bertram Mackennal, used on the coinage of other British colonies and dominions. Reverse designs were a matter of collaboration between the Royal Mint Advisory Committee, headed by Deputy Master Robert Johnson, and the New Zealand government. Local artists and members of the New Zealand Numismatic Society were consulted throughout the design process, but British designers were tasked with creating an initial series of designs, despite requests from local art societies for domestic artistry of the coins. Metcalfe and George Kruger Gray were experienced artists who had each previously designed coinage for several other British dominions and colonies. The two were tasked to submit designs for each of the five initial silver denominations of coinage. [8] [9]
Both Metcalfe and Kruger Gray submitted plaster models for the half-crown. Both were based on the coat of arms of New Zealand, but the Advisory Committee strongly preferred Kruger Gray's rendering, only requiring minor modifications to the text positioning. With a woodcut motif inspired by koruru carvings, the design was later commended for combining Pākehā and Māori iconography. [10] The coin, with modified lettering, was approved on 18 July 1933. [11]
New Zealand's prime minister George Forbes held a very weak premiership, and finance minister Gordon Coates served as de facto acting prime minister, especially during Forbes' extended stays in Britain. In July 1933, Coates appointed a Coinage Design Committee, composed of various local artists alongside members of the New Zealand Numismatic Society. [12] Coates's committee advocated for the full achievement of arms, including supporters, to be depicted on the half-crown. This was considered unacceptable to Kruger Gray, who wrote that there was "far too much in it to make this possible and even if it were done the result would be most unsatisfactory from both the artistic and practical points of view." [13] Coates ultimately approved Kruger Gray's design in August, due to the pressing shortage of high denomination silver coinage. The coin would be the only of Kruger Gray's designs to be approved by Coates without modification. [14]
The first shipment of half-crowns, £250,000 in face value, was en route to New Zealand by early November. Throughout November, Coates attempted to push the Coinage Act, 1933 through Parliament, retroactively authorising their production and assigning the coins as legal tender. Although parliamentary debate continued on the coins' design and the need for a distinct national currency, the bill was passed on 27 November. The shipment arrived three weeks later, and quickly entered circulation. [6] [15]
Coates gave a description of the coin to the public on 5 November 1933, with a reproduction of the design appearing in the Auckland Weekly News two days later. The Dominion praised the coin's sharpness and "exquisite finish", as well as the quaternary alloy used in the coin's production. [16] The Evening Post featured an interview with numismatist Allan Sutherland describing the design process, praising the design as a "happy blending of heraldic and native features", as well as the detail of Metcalfe's obverse. [17] Although lauding the coin in the interview, Sutherland privately wrote that the reverse design was overcrowded. [18]
Considerable religious opposition emerged to the coin's omission of Dei Gratia and Fidei Defensor from the King's listed titles. The New Zealand Baptist declared the removal as reflecting the atheistic attitudes of the New Zealand government. [18] The Federation of New Zealand Justices called for the return of the Latin mottoes to future coinage. Treasury Secretary Alexander Park relayed to the press that the omission was approved by the King, with the titles having been removed on the coinage of all dominions except Australia. British politician John Sandeman Allen raised the issue to the New Zealand Parliament while visiting in late 1934, but no action was taken to modify the titles. [19]
New Zealand's first commemorative coin, the Waitangi crown, faced a lengthy design and production process, and was ultimately unpopular with collectors. These delays and difficulties encouraged the longer-term planning of future commemorative coins. [20] By August 1936, the New Zealand Numismatic Society began pursuing the creation of commemorative coinage to be issued for the hundredth anniversary of the Treaty of Waitangi, seen as a centennial for the country itself. Allan Sutherland proposed the creation of a commemorative half-crown to be released into circulation at face value. [21] The government was receptive to the Society's proposal, and cooperated with it to design the commemorative issue. Commemorative issues for other denominations such as the florin were rejected in favour of the larger half-crown. [22]
From late August 1938 to the end of September, a competition was held for the design of the commemorative half-crown, as well as for the proposed penny and halfpenny denominations. Metcalfe and Kruger Gray both submitted designs for the half-crown, but Leonard Cornwall Mitchell's designs were selected for all three denominations. [23] His half-crown design featured a Māori woman in piupiu standing with her arms outstretched, surrounded by traditional Māori architecture on her right, a modern cityscape on her left, and a rising sun behind her head. The Royal Mint's task of transferring Mitchell's sketch to coinage proved troublesome. The design of the piupiu was simplified to a less authentic vertical pattern. High Commissioner Jordan approved the coin in August 1939, and the coin entered production. [24] The coin was relatively popular to the public, and had almost entirely disappeared from circulation by 1941. [25]
Mintage figures of the half-crown varied over its period in circulation; many years saw no half-crowns issued, including a seven-year stretch from 1954 to 1960. No half-crowns of the "regular" design were issued in 1940, when the centennial commemorative was issued. [26]
Half-crowns are approximately 32.3 mm in diameter and 14.1 grams in weight. [27] Initially struck in .500 fineness, the coins were made with cupronickel from 1947 onward. Many were recalled from circulation by banks and melted for their silver content. The half-crown was abolished in 1967 in favour of the new denominations of the New Zealand dollar. [28]
1933 | 1934 | 1935 | 1936 |
---|---|---|---|
2,000,000 | 2,720,000 | 612,000 | 0 |
1937 | 1938 | 1939 | 1940 | 1941 | 1942 | 1943 | 1944 | 1945 | 1946 | 1947 | 1948 | 1949 | 1950 | 1951 | 1952 |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
672,000 | 0 | 0 | 100,800 [lower-alpha 1] | 776,000 | 240,000 | 1,120,000 | 180,000 | 420,000 | 960,000 | 1,600,000 | 1,400,000 | 2,800,000 | 3,600,000 | 1,200,000 | 0 |
1953 | 1954 | 1955 | 1956 | 1957 | 1958 | 1959 | 1960 | 1961 | 1962 | 1963 | 1964 | 1965 |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
120,000 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 80,000 | 600,000 | 400,000 | 0 | 1,400,000 |
The standard circulating coinage of the United Kingdom, British Crown Dependencies and British Overseas Territories is denominated in pennies and pounds sterling, and ranges in value from one penny sterling to two pounds. Since decimalisation, on 15 February 1971, the pound has been divided into 100 (new) pence. Before decimalisation, twelve pence made a shilling, and twenty shillings made a pound.
The double florin, or four-shilling piece, was a British coin produced by the Royal Mint between 1887 and 1890. One of the shortest-lived of all British coin denominations, it was struck in only four years. Its obverse, designed by Joseph Boehm and engraved by Leonard Charles Wyon, depicts Queen Victoria, whilst the reverse, featuring national symbols of the United Kingdom, was designed by Wyon based on the coinage of Charles II.
The pound was the currency of Australia from 1910 until 14 February 1966, when it was replaced by the Australian dollar. Like other £sd currencies, it was subdivided into 20 shillings, each of 12 pence.
There have been three sets of coins in Ireland since independence. In all three, the coin showed a Celtic harp on the obverse. The pre-decimal coins of the Irish pound had realistic animals on the reverse; the decimal coins retained some of these but featured ornamental birds on the lower denominations; and the euro coins used the common design of the euro currencies. The pre-decimal and original decimal coins were of the same dimensions as the same-denomination British coins, as the Irish pound was in currency union with the British pound sterling. British coins were widely accepted in Ireland, and conversely to a lesser extent. In 1979 Ireland joined the Exchange Rate Mechanism and the Irish pound left parity with sterling; coin designs introduced after this differed between the two countries.
The coins of the South African pound were part of the physical form of South Africa's historical currency, the South African pound. Prior to the Union of 1910, various authorities issued their own pounds, some as independent entities. After the Union but before 1923, coins in circulation were mostly British, but the coins of Paul Kruger's South African Republic remained in circulation. In 1923, South Africa began to issue its own coins, adopting coins that were identical in size and value to those used in Great Britain: 12 pence (12d) = 1 shilling (1s), and 20s = 1 pound (£1). On 14 February 1961, the Union of South Africa adopted a decimal currency, replacing the pound with the Rand.
The florin is a coin issued for the New Zealand pound from 1933 to 1965, equal to two shillings or twenty-four pence. The coin features a kiwi on the reverse and the reigning monarch on the obverse. It was introduced in 1933 as part of the first issue of New Zealand pound coinage, due to shortages of British silver coins resulting from the devaluation of local currency relative to the pound sterling. A lengthy design process was further protracted due to differing proposed design motifs between the Royal Mint, supporting a reverse design featuring heraldic ships, and the Gordon Coates–appointed Coinage Committee's proposed kiwi design. This disagreement led to almost a dozen proposed designs and revisions before the finalised issue entered circulation in February 1934. Initially struck in silver by the Royal Mint to replace the previous imperial florin, it was struck in cupronickel from 1947 due to rising precious metal prices. While proposed as the base of a decimalised New Zealand coinage since the 1930s, the florin was ultimately replaced in 1967 by the coinage of the New Zealand dollar.
The coins of the Australian dollar were introduced on 14 February 1966, although they did not at that time include the one-dollar or two-dollar coins. The dollar was equivalent in value to 10 shillings in the former currency.
The Australian florin was a coin used in the Commonwealth of Australia before decimalisation in 1966. The florin was worth two shillings . The denomination was first minted in 1910 to the same size and weight as the British florin.
The double sovereign is a gold coin of the United Kingdom with a nominal value of two pounds sterling (£2). Rarely issued in the first century and a half after its debut in 1820, it never had a significant presence in circulation. It is now a collector and bullion coin, and has been struck most years since 1980. It features the reigning monarch on its obverse and, most often, Benedetto Pistrucci's depiction of Saint George and the Dragon on the reverse.
The Jubilee coinage or Jubilee head coinage are British coins with an obverse featuring a depiction of Queen Victoria by Joseph Edgar Boehm. The design was placed on the silver and gold circulating coinage beginning in 1887, and on the Maundy coinage beginning in 1888. The depiction of Victoria wearing a crown that was seen as too small was widely mocked, and was replaced in 1893. The series saw the entire issuance of the double florin (1887–1890) and, in 1888, the last issue for circulation of the groat, or fourpence piece, although it was intended for use in British Guiana. No bronze coins were struck with the Jubilee design.
The Old Head coinage or Veiled Head coinage were British coins struck and dated between 1893 and 1901, which featured on the obverse a portrait by Thomas Brock of an aged Queen Victoria wearing a diadem partially hidden by a widow's veil. It replaced the Jubilee coinage, struck since 1887, which had been widely criticised both for the portrait of the Queen, and because the reverses of most of the coins did not state their monetary values. Some denominations continued with their old reverse designs, with Benedetto Pistrucci's design for the sovereign extended to the half sovereign. New designs for some of the silver coinage were inaugurated, created either by Brock or by Edward Poynter, and all denominations less than the crown, or five-shilling piece, stated their values.
The halfpenny was first issued in New Zealand in 1940, seven years after the first introduction of a domestic pound coinage. The coin's issuing was scheduled to align with the centennial of the Treaty of Waitangi and the New Zealand centennial, alongside the penny and centennial half-crown. Designed by Leonard Cornwall Mitchell after winning a government-sponsored design competition, the halfpenny features the head of the reigning monarch on the obverse, with a hei-tiki pedant ornamented with simplified kowhaiwhai woodcarvings on the reverse. The smallest of all denominations of the New Zealand pound, the copper coin was worth 1/480th of a pound, or 1/120th of a crown, the largest coinage denomination. It was discontinued alongside all other New Zealand currency following decimalisation in 1967.
The Waitangi crown is a commemorative crown coin struck in 1935 by the British Royal Mint for the Dominion of New Zealand to commemorate the 1840 signing of the Treaty of Waitangi, often seen as New Zealand's founding constitutional document. It was the first five-shilling piece minted of the New Zealand pound and the nation's first coin minted primarily for collectors. Following the rejection of designs by James Berry and George Kruger Gray, Royal Mint designer Percy Metcalfe was commissioned to design the reverse. Design disagreements plagued the production of the crown, and only an extremely small mintage of 1,128 was struck and distributed to collectors. Released to muted media coverage and a general lack of interest in coin collecting during the economic aftermath of the Great Depression, the coin has become heavily sought by collectors of New Zealand coinage. Regularly selling for thousands of dollars, one pattern issue of the coin auctioned at over $70,000 USD, becoming the most expensive New Zealand coin ever sold.
The first coinage of the New Zealand pound was introduced in 1933 in response to large-scale smuggling of prior British imperial coinage after devaluation of New Zealand exchange rates relative to the pound sterling and large influxes of other foreign coinage into circulation. The Coinage Act, 1933 outlined the weights and compositions of various denominations, out of which five silver issues entered circulation over the following year, after lengthy disagreement between rival coinage design committees. The copper penny and halfpenny entered circulation in 1940, corresponding to anniversary of the New Zealand centennial. An eighth denomination of coin, the five-shilling piece or crown, was produced solely through three commemorative issues. The first issue, the Waitangi crown, was produced in extremely limited quantities and sold to collectors. Later commemorative crown issues in 1949 and 1953 were produced for circulation.
The New Zealand penny is a large bronze coin issued from 1939 to 1965. Introduced seven years after the larger denominations of New Zealand pound coinage, the coin's issuing was scheduled to align with the centennial of the Treaty of Waitangi and the New Zealand centennial, alongside the halfpenny and centennial half-crown. Featuring the standard portrait of the ruling monarch on the obverse, the reverse features a tūī bird perched atop a kōwhai branch.
The New Zealand shilling was first issued in 1933 alongside four other denominations of New Zealand pound coinage, introduced due to shortages of comparable British silver coinage following the devaluation of the New Zealand pound relative to the pound sterling. Roughly 24 mm in diameter, it is slightly larger than the British coin it replaced. Worth twelve pence, the denomination was equal to half a florin, two sixpence, or two-fifths of a half-crown.
The New Zealand threepence is a coin of the New Zealand pound issued from 1933 to 1965. Equal to three pence, the coin was the smallest in size of all New Zealand pound coinage, and the smallest in denomination of the initial 1933 issue of New Zealand pound coinage, produced due to shortages of British silver coins resulting from the devaluation of local currency relative to the pound sterling. British artist George Kruger Gray designed the coin's reverse design after an earlier pattern design featuring a hei-tiki was rejected by a coinage design committee organised by Gordon Coates. It features two crossed patu below the label "3d". Initially struck in silver by the Royal Mint, it was struck in cupronickel from 1947 onward due to rising precious metal prices. Following decimilisation in 1967, the threepence was replaced by the coinage of the New Zealand dollar.
The New Zealand sixpence is a coin of the New Zealand pound issued from 1933 to 1965. Equal to twice a threepence or half a shilling, the sixpence was one of five denominations of silver coinage introduced in the initial issue of New Zealand coinage in 1933. Early designs for the coin featuring spears and silver ferns were rejected by committee. The coin's final reverse, designed by George Kruger Gray, features a female huia, an extinct New Zealand bird, perched atop a branch. Issued in 50% silver until a postwar rise in silver prices triggered a shift to cupronickel in 1947, the coin was minted with relative consistency until 1965, when it was discontinued following decimalisation and the adoption of the New Zealand dollar.
The Centennial half-crown is a commemorative coin of the New Zealand half-crown released in 1940 to coincide with the hundredth anniversary of the Treaty of Waitangi. Designed by New Zealand artist Leonard Cornwall Mitchell, the coin features a Māori woman surrounded by both traditional and modern architecture. Although a relatively large number, over a hundred thousand, were issued, the coin was obtainable at face value and quickly disappeared from circulation.
A commemorative crown coin of the New Zealand pound was produced for a planned visit by King George VI in 1949. Having first visited the country in 1927 in his duties as the Duke of York, proposals for a visit by the monarch to New Zealand in 1940 were postponed by the outbreak of World War II. A 1949 tour by the king and queen to Australia and New Zealand was announced in early 1948, the first visit of a reigning monarch to the dominion.