The Imperial British East Africa Company received its Royal Charter in 1888, and the coinage it commissioned — struck at the Birmingham Mint under Ralph Heaton & Sons — was designed to displace the Maria Theresa Thaler and Indian rupee that had dominated East African trade for generations. The effort largely failed. Local merchants and caravan traders along the interior routes continued preferring the coins they already trusted, and IBEAC's financial position deteriorated rapidly.
The Company surrendered its charter to the Crown in 1895, making this a five-year coinage from an entity that never achieved monetary dominance in its own territory.
The Imperial British East Africa Company received its Royal Charter in 1888, and the coinage it commissioned — struck at the Birmingham Mint under Ralph Heaton & Sons — was designed to displace the Maria Theresa Thaler and Indian rupee that had dominated East African trade for generations. The effort largely failed. Local merchants and caravan traders along the interior routes continued preferring the coins they already trusted, and IBEAC's financial position deteriorated rapidly.
The Company surrendered its charter to the Crown in 1895, making this a five-year coinage from an entity that never achieved monetary dominance in its own territory.