Liberian silver
Verfasst: Di 27.09.11 04:34
Liberia is an African country that descends from the settlement efforts begun in 1822 by the American Colonization Society, which had been organized in 1816. The idea behind the settlements was that they should become a destination for freed African-American slaves.
In 1847, Liberia became Africa’s first republic.
Over the years, the nation of Liberia has occupied a special place in American folklore. But as is almost always the case with national myth-making, the reality is sometimes...inconvenient. There’s plenty of idealism to be found in the Liberian experience, but there is also no shortage of cynicism.
There were two issues of Liberian copper coinage, in 1847 and 1862, but there were no Liberian silver coins until the issue of a full range of circulating coinage struck at the Heaton mint, dated 1896. That first Liberian silver coinage consisted of three denominations, the 10-cents, 25-cents, and 50-cents, all coined in sterling (.925) silver.
Ten years later, in 1906, an additional mintage of these coins was needed. Below is the 25-cent coin from that second issue, also struck in Birmingham, England.
Some 34,000 of these 1906 Liberian 25-cent pieces were minted, and as it happens, the image of this coin also appears on Liberia’s first “coin” postage stamp, the blue-and-black 25-cent of 1906.
The single star beneath the portrait suggests the single star on the Liberian flag, which—having replaced the original flag’s Christian cross—was intended to symbolize Liberia’s existence as a united and independent nation.
But note the portrait. It’s an image that I personally find very pleasing, but it seems much more European than African....
In 1847, Liberia became Africa’s first republic.
Over the years, the nation of Liberia has occupied a special place in American folklore. But as is almost always the case with national myth-making, the reality is sometimes...inconvenient. There’s plenty of idealism to be found in the Liberian experience, but there is also no shortage of cynicism.
There were two issues of Liberian copper coinage, in 1847 and 1862, but there were no Liberian silver coins until the issue of a full range of circulating coinage struck at the Heaton mint, dated 1896. That first Liberian silver coinage consisted of three denominations, the 10-cents, 25-cents, and 50-cents, all coined in sterling (.925) silver.
Ten years later, in 1906, an additional mintage of these coins was needed. Below is the 25-cent coin from that second issue, also struck in Birmingham, England.
Some 34,000 of these 1906 Liberian 25-cent pieces were minted, and as it happens, the image of this coin also appears on Liberia’s first “coin” postage stamp, the blue-and-black 25-cent of 1906.
The single star beneath the portrait suggests the single star on the Liberian flag, which—having replaced the original flag’s Christian cross—was intended to symbolize Liberia’s existence as a united and independent nation.
But note the portrait. It’s an image that I personally find very pleasing, but it seems much more European than African....