R. Josephs operated a general merchant business in Launceston during the 1850s, a period when the colonial copper shortage was acute enough that private traders routinely commissioned token coinage from British die-sinkers — primarily the Birmingham firm of Heaton & Sons — to keep small transactions moving. The broader Tasmanian token series of this decade is unusually well-documented by contemporary merchant records, making provenance attribution more reliable here than in most Australian colonial issues.
Andrews #310 is relatively scarce in problem-free condition; the copper alloy used across this production run is prone to environmental spotting from Tasmania's damp climate.
R. Josephs operated a general merchant business in Launceston during the 1850s, a period when the colonial copper shortage was acute enough that private traders routinely commissioned token coinage from British die-sinkers — primarily the Birmingham firm of Heaton & Sons — to keep small transactions moving. The broader Tasmanian token series of this decade is unusually well-documented by contemporary merchant records, making provenance attribution more reliable here than in most Australian colonial issues.
Andrews #310 is relatively scarce in problem-free condition; the copper alloy used across this production run is prone to environmental spotting from Tasmania's damp climate.