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Hong Kong Victoria

1867  One Dollar reverse 1867  One Dollar obverse

1867 One Dollar

Mintage:2,108,000
Figure shared with:
1866
1867/6
1868
Mint:Hong Kong Monarch:Victoria Reverse Designer:William Wyon Obverse Designer:Leonard Wyon Size:38mm Weight:26.96g Edge:Milled Composition:90% Silver
10% Copper

Values

Sales History

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The Hong Kong One Dollar was first introduced in 1866 by the new mint in Sugar Street on Hong Kong island. The obverse featured an effigy of Queen Victoria by Leaonard Wyon surrounded by a scroll pattern border with the legend QUEEN VICTORIA. The reverse, designed by William Wyon, showed a four leaf clover with each petal containing a Chinese character depicting the date, denomination and country of origin. The legend reads ONE DOLLAR HONG KONG.

The official currency of Hong Kong was the British Pound although it was not well received by the population as the traders were used to the Chinese system of using the weight of silver for their transactions. It was the policy of the British Government to introduce sterling silver coinage to their colonies since 1825 and the Spanish and Mexican eight Reales became legal tender and set at a value of four shillings two pence. The Government eventually concluded that their efforts to introduce the sterling coinage was unsuccessful in overcoming the strong local support of the Spanish silver dollar. The British Government made the decision, as it had also done in Canada, that it could not displace the local currency and the Royal Mint in London commenced the issue of special subsidiary coinage to run alongside the local dollar currency.

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