The British North Borneo Chartered Company received its royal charter in 1881, making it one of the last private companies in history granted sovereign powers over a territory — authority that included raising an army, administering justice, and issuing currency. This half cent was among the first coins struck for the territory, produced at the Heaton Mint in Birmingham. The company retained commercial control over the region until the Japanese invasion of 1941 effectively ended its administration, after which the Colonial Office refused to allow private rule to resume.
The British North Borneo Chartered Company received its royal charter in 1881, making it one of the last private companies in history granted sovereign powers over a territory — authority that included raising an army, administering justice, and issuing currency. This half cent was among the first coins struck for the territory, produced at the Heaton Mint in Birmingham. The company retained commercial control over the region until the Japanese invasion of 1941 effectively ended its administration, after which the Colonial Office refused to allow private rule to resume.