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1/2 Penny Wellington Waterloo - ship design

Emittent Lower Canada
Jahr 1815
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Material Copper
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Aversbeschreibung A fully-rigged sailing warship depicted in profile, sailing to the right, its multiple masts carrying furled and set sails with rigging rendered in fine detail. The hull sits low on stylized waves indicated by horizontal lines at the base of the design. The entire device is contained within a beaded border that encircles the coin's flat field, with no legend present on this face.
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Reversbeschreibung The reverse bears a bold three-line inscription centered in the field, reading WELLINGTON above WATERLOO above 1815, the date commemorating the Duke of Wellington's decisive victory at the Battle of Waterloo. The lettering is rendered in large, well-spaced serif capital letters, occupying the majority of the field. The inscription is surrounded by a continuous beaded border, with no additional devices or decorative elements.
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Zusätzliche Informationen

Issued in the year of Waterloo, this token entered circulation through the acute small-change shortage that plagued Lower Canada throughout the early nineteenth century — the colonial administration repeatedly failed to supply adequate regal coinage, leaving merchants and private issuers to fill the gap. Wellington tokens of this period flooded in from British merchants exploiting that vacuum, often struck cheaply in Birmingham and shipped across the Atlantic as commercial ventures rather than official monetary instruments.

Breton 1003 is among the more frequently encountered of the Wellington series, though die alignment and planchet quality vary considerably across the type.

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