Honduras experimented with copper-nickel coinage in the late 1860s under pressure to modernize its fractional currency, which had long relied on worn Spanish colonial silver. The 1869 pattern series, of which this piece is part, was never adopted for circulation — the republic lacked both the minting infrastructure and the political stability to commit to a new alloy at the time.
KM#Pn6 is among the scarcer entries in the Honduran pattern sequence, with surviving examples traceable almost entirely to collector acquisition rather than institutional holdings.
Honduras experimented with copper-nickel coinage in the late 1860s under pressure to modernize its fractional currency, which had long relied on worn Spanish colonial silver. The 1869 pattern series, of which this piece is part, was never adopted for circulation — the republic lacked both the minting infrastructure and the political stability to commit to a new alloy at the time.
KM#Pn6 is among the scarcer entries in the Honduran pattern sequence, with surviving examples traceable almost entirely to collector acquisition rather than institutional holdings.