J.M. Merrington & Co. operated a general store in Nelson, New Zealand, during the 1860s, a period when the colonial government had issued insufficient small denomination coinage to meet local retail demand. Tradesmen's tokens like this one filled that gap — accepted at the issuing merchant and often circulating more broadly by necessity. Nelson's relative geographic isolation on the northern tip of the South Island made local token issues particularly practical.
The Andrews, Renniks, and Gray references all catalog this piece, suggesting it survived in enough quantity to be well-documented, though Merrington's business tenure was short.
J.M. Merrington & Co. operated a general store in Nelson, New Zealand, during the 1860s, a period when the colonial government had issued insufficient small denomination coinage to meet local retail demand. Tradesmen's tokens like this one filled that gap — accepted at the issuing merchant and often circulating more broadly by necessity. Nelson's relative geographic isolation on the northern tip of the South Island made local token issues particularly practical.
The Andrews, Renniks, and Gray references all catalog this piece, suggesting it survived in enough quantity to be well-documented, though Merrington's business tenure was short.