Get the latest news to your email inbox FREE!

REGISTER

Get the latest news to your email inbox FREE!

REGISTER
HomestoriesFrom bartering to an array of foreign coins

From bartering to an array of foreign coins

What was Australia’s currency before the 1919 penny was first minted on Australian soil? In colonial times, coins in use were produced overseas in Mother England or in India. Even earlier, the bartering of goods in high demand and the use of coins from other countries was accepted tender.

The main coins in circulation in the colony of NSW were English sovereigns, shillings and pence, Spanish reales, Indian rupees and Dutch guilders. While sailors, convicts, soldiers and merchant ships from around the world making their way to an Australian port on the east coast from 1770, coins from other countries were in common use.

In 1800 Governor Phillip Gidley King placed fixed values on some of the most common coins in an attempt to stabilize the currency. He set the silver Spanish dollar’s value at 5 shillings. Unfortunately, many of these coins soon left the country on ships from America, Asia and the Cape of Good Hope, leading to a shortage of coins.

In 1812, Governor Macquarie requested that Australia be able to mint its own currency due to a serious shortage of coins in the colony. In response, the British government sent 40,000 silver Spanish dollars (pieces of eight or reales) which arrived in November 1812 from Madras, aboard the ship Samarang.

Macquarie then ordered William Henshall, a convict transported for forgery, to cut a piece from the centre of each coin. The coins were stamped to identify them as currency of the colony of New South Wales. This rendered the coin useless outside the colony, solving the problem of the currency leaving the country, and quickly doubled the number of coins in circulation. The piece cut from the centre was called the dump and valued at 15 pence. The outer ring of the coin was called the holey dollar and its value set at 5 shillings. It took Henshall some time to produce the machinery needed to convert these Spanish pieces of eight. The resulting coins were stamped with their value and “NEW SOUTH WALES 1813. Henshall also worked his initial “H” into a spray of leaves in the design of the holey dollar and on the reverse of the dump.

Holey dollars and dumps were to be the colony’s legal tender for the next 16 years. One rare, quite well-preserved example of the holey dollar is held in the National Museum of Australia with only about 300 examples of the dollar and about 1000 examples of the dump known to exist today. Many were recalled and melted down to strike later coinage.

In 1852, a gold coin known as the Adelaide pound was issued when South Australia found itself extremely short of coinage. Made at the Adelaide Assay Office using gold from the Victorian goldfields, it was not approved by Britain and was never legal tender.

A few years after federation the 1909 Coinage Act was passed, which provided for the production of uniquely Australian coins. By 1910 the very first Australian coins were issued, namely the florin, shilling, sixpence and threepence. In 1911, the first penny and halfpenny were issued.

The Royal Australian Mint in Canberra was built in preparation for decimalisation ‘Changeover Day’, which occurred in February 1966. This day saw Australia’s currency of pounds, shillings and pence replaced with decimal currency denominated in dollars and cents. Initially there were six coins and four banknotes, all produced on Australian soil at the Royal Australian Mint, where all Australian currency is produced.

Article produced by the Ipswich Historical Society.

Digital Edition
Subscribe

Get an all ACCESS PASS to the News and your Digital Edition with an online subscription

Schmidt and House snag first win

Dealer: S Vul: E/W NORTH ♠ K63 ♥ 93 ♦ J8643 ♣ K73 WEST EAST ♠ AQJ107 ♠ 982 ♥ AK74 ♥ 865 ♦ Q95 ♦ 10 ♣ Q ♣ A96542 SOUTH ♠ 54 ♥ QJ102 ♦ AK72 ♣...
More News

Swimmers set to step up for championships

Stanthorpe and Warwick Swimming Clubs are setting their sights on the Darling Downs Regional Swimming Association’s Country Championships hosted by Dalby Dolphins Swim Club...

Marathon livestream raises $5,500 for breast cancer

Drew Costello started his new year with a test of endurance with a 24 hour gaming livestream that involved him dying his hair and...

Stanthorpe cricketers to defend shield

An opening stand of 97 has steered Stanthorpe to victory against Toowoomba with the side now set to host Lockyer in the final of...

Vineyard starts Granite Belt’s first juniper berry plantation

New Tricks Winery and Distillery has officially established the Granite Belt’s first juniper plantation, marking a bold new expansion for the family-owned business in...

RSL triumph in T20 final

They were predicted to be the easy-beats of the Stanthorpe and District Cricket competition this season but instead after some handy recruitments, RSL already...

Character remembered as Cricket returns

It was a somber return to Warwick Cricket on Saturday afternoon with a minutes silence for one of the characters and stalwarts of local...

Warwick ‘She-Wolves’ hunting new recruits

The Warwick Wolves Women’s football team is on the lookout for new players as preparations ramp up for the upcoming season. Pre-season training is already...

Two community leaders honoured with prestigious fellowships

Community service and international goodwill were front and centre this week when the Rotary Club of Stanthorpe and the Lions Club of Stanthorpe came...

Silver start to the year

Filomena Silve has taken out the first Stanthorpe Women’s Wednesday Monthly Medal and Putting Competition of the year held on 7 January. There was...

Solid foundation for Parker

Jack Parker has taken out the Foundation Cup at the Stanthorpe Golf Club at the weekend Parker took out the The stroke competition played...