The Copper Company of Upper Canada was a merchant token issuer operating in the currency vacuum left by chronic official coin shortages in late 18th-century British North America. Colonial authorities repeatedly failed to supply adequate small change, leaving private traders to fill the gap with tokens of wildly varying quality and legitimacy. This piece dates to a particularly acute shortage period following the American Revolutionary War's disruption of established trade patterns.
Breton 722 is the standard reference for this type among Canadian token collectors. The "Copper Company" attribution has historically attracted scrutiny — whether a formal incorporated concern or a looser merchant consortium behind the issue remains debated.
The Copper Company of Upper Canada was a merchant token issuer operating in the currency vacuum left by chronic official coin shortages in late 18th-century British North America. Colonial authorities repeatedly failed to supply adequate small change, leaving private traders to fill the gap with tokens of wildly varying quality and legitimacy. This piece dates to a particularly acute shortage period following the American Revolutionary War's disruption of established trade patterns.
Breton 722 is the standard reference for this type among Canadian token collectors. The "Copper Company" attribution has historically attracted scrutiny — whether a formal incorporated concern or a looser merchant consortium behind the issue remains debated.