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British Trade Dollars | History | Design | Mintages


UKSILVERCOINS

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Posted

The silver British Dollar (commonly called the trade dollar) was born out of commercial necessity. It was issued at a time when the burgeoning trade in the East needed a medium of payment.

  By the middle of the nineteenth century the British presence in the East was being keenly felt. The Straits Settlements, established to link the now-defunct British East India Company's outposts of Penang, Malacca and Singapore, were beginning to flourish as important centres of trade in the Malay Archipelago.

In 1842, with the signing of the Treaty of Nanking, China, having lost the Opium War, ceded the "barren" island of Hong Kong to the British in perpetuity and opened up five coastal cities (subsequently called the "Treaty Ports") to foreign trade. In 1859, the Suez Canal was opened, thereby shortening the sea between Europe and Asia by several months. In 1869, Japan was launched in to the golden age of the Meiji period which saw the lifting of restrictions on foreign trade.

  It was the dawn of a new era of trade.

 Thus spawned the problem of finding a suitable currency for the heightened commercial activities. It began to occupy the urgent attention of local authorities who were urged on by merchants-particularly those in the Straits Settlements and Hong Kong- who began sending petition after petition for the introduction of an acceptable coin that would circulate easily in the silver-using countries of the East.

  The problem came to a head when, at the end of the nineteenth century, an over-production of silver caused an upset in the goldsilver ratio, an extremely serious situation because many countries in the East used silver to back their currencies. As the price of silver plummeted the shortage of minted dollars became worse. Moreover, it became evident that trade was being dislocated as a result.

  It the end, to overcome the real threat of a currency famine, the British government, on the suggestion of the Colonial Currency Committee, approved the minting of a special British dollar for use in the Eastern trade.

  The approval was long in coming-it was not until 1894 that the go-ahead was given the poor acceptance by the traders in the East Indies of the British dollar's forerunner, the Portcullis money (which were brought out by the East India Company in the early 1600s for use by the English merchants in their trade with the East), this lack of enthusiasm was understandable .

  However, the obstacles to acceptance that were nearly three hundred years ago were now gone. The British had been dominating the Eastern seas after the struggle with the Dutch ended in the latter's decline.

'Shou' for longevity

  Anyway, to provide the new British dollar a better chance of acceptance by countries outside British dominion, a decision was made to give the coins an Eastern look. The British character of the coin was limited to the figure of Britannia surrounded by a Chinese scroll-pattern border on the obverse. The same scroll work and the denomination in Chinese and Arabic script of the Malay language (the two main languages of the intended areas of circulation) were on the reverse. In the centre between the denominations was a Chinese labyrinth, one of the many variations of the Chinese character "shou" for longevity.

  The coins was grain-edged, had a diameter of 39 cm and was struck in 26.95 grams (416 grains) of 0.900 fine silver.

  The dies were prepared by London Royal Mint engraver G W De Saulles. Three mints participated in the minting of the coins - the Indian Government Mints at Bombay and Calcutta as well as the Royal Mint in London.

Same authority

  By the time the British dollar made its appearance there were already several other "trade dollars" on the market. The most common of them was the Mexican silver dollar-the famous eight reale,0.900 fine silver coin which was minted as early as 1824. This was followed by the United States trade dollar of 420 grains of 0.900 fine silver minted between 1873 and 1883, the Japanese trade dollar of similar weight and fineness minted between 1875 and 1877, and the French "Piastre de Commerce" which came in two weights, i.e. 27.215 grams (minted between 1885 and 1895) and 27 grams (minted between 1895 and 1928).

  In concept and purpose the British dollar-which came in only one denomination-was exactly the same as the Portcullis money of the early 1600s and was even issued by the same authority, i.e. the Royal Prerogative of the English sovereign.

  But unlike the coinage of the realm, the dollar was not given a fixed sterling value; its value fluctuated according to the prices of silver at any given date.

  The British dollar was declared legal tender on February 2, 1895 by an Order of Council in the Straits Settlements, Hong Kong and Labuan (off the north-west coast of British North Borneo).

   Although it was minted till 1935, the British dollar was quite quickly demonetised, fist in the Straits Settlements in 1904 and then in Labuan in 1905. But it continued to remain as legal tender in Hong Kong until 1937, at the outbreak of the second Sino-Japanese War of 1937-45.

  After that it lost its legal circulation status and was merchandised. Anyway, the coins struck in 1934 and 1935 were generally not released for circulation.

  In addition to those coins that were produced for circulation, there were two other versions. One was a silver proof and the other a gold proof. As for the latter proof, they were struck between 1895 and 1902 only. A total of 274,237,157 coins of all versions were struck by the three mints between 1895 and 1935 with no minting in 1905-06, 1914-20, 1922-24, 1926-28, and  1931-33. The largest mintage was in 1911 when 37,470,509 coins were struck. The smallest mintage was in 1921 when only 50,211 coins were produced.

Substitution

  Curiously, the popularity of the British dollar-which was and still is regarded by collectors as a beautifully designed coins-led private Chinese mints in Canton (Guangzhou today) to strike a lower silver-content imitation of the 1908 coin. This could be distinguished by the substitution of "ONE DOLLAR" by "FOR JEWELLERY" while the mint letter "B" was replaced by a large incuse dot on the reverse. All other details remained the same.

Source:Coin Digest.Ng L.K. Ewe

Posted

Great info, thanks. I love trade dollars but am not confident enough to pick out a genuine one on eBay yet

Posted

I found one in a coin shop once, but my dad re-paid a favour I gave to him (I picked out a really nicely toned Morgan - probably my best looking so far - from right under his nose). The trade dollar looked great, the US do a really beautiful trade dollar and so did the Japanese which looks exquisite and probably up high on my most wanted

 

http://4.bp.blogspot.com/-9tmQyzC1kkA/TdvgubeFBXI/AAAAAAAAEeg/Ob0O1TXGQss/s1600/JPTD1876.jpg

http://websitepicturesonly.coinauctionshelp.com/New_US_COIN_IMAGES/LargeDollars/1874tradedollar.jpg

Posted

Yes, there are many many fakes out there, even ones made from 900 silver.

Now that makes it a hard spot.

Stacker since 2013

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