Newfoundland's 1860 halfpenny predates Confederation by seven years and reflects the colony's insistence on managing its own fiscal affairs — a position it held with unusual stubbornness well into the twentieth century. The "Responsible Government and Free Trade" inscription was a direct political statement, referencing the self-governance Newfoundland had achieved in 1855 after years of agitation against appointed Colonial Office control.
These were struck in Birmingham, as Newfoundland had no domestic minting capacity. The issue was short-lived; decimal coinage replaced the old pound-shilling system within a few years.
Newfoundland's 1860 halfpenny predates Confederation by seven years and reflects the colony's insistence on managing its own fiscal affairs — a position it held with unusual stubbornness well into the twentieth century. The "Responsible Government and Free Trade" inscription was a direct political statement, referencing the self-governance Newfoundland had achieved in 1855 after years of agitation against appointed Colonial Office control.
These were struck in Birmingham, as Newfoundland had no domestic minting capacity. The issue was short-lived; decimal coinage replaced the old pound-shilling system within a few years.