Cook Islands issued a wave of commemorative silver dollars in the early 2000s tied to the Athens 2004 Games, capitalizing on the IOC's licensing program that allowed smaller sovereign territories to mint Olympic-themed coinage years ahead of the event. The three-year lead time before the actual Games was deliberate — it maximized retail sales windows through numismatic distributors rather than through any domestic circulation channel.
Cook Islands has no mint of its own; this piece was almost certainly produced by the Pobjoy Mint in Surrey, which held long-running contracts with Pacific island territories for exactly this category of collector issue.
Cook Islands issued a wave of commemorative silver dollars in the early 2000s tied to the Athens 2004 Games, capitalizing on the IOC's licensing program that allowed smaller sovereign territories to mint Olympic-themed coinage years ahead of the event. The three-year lead time before the actual Games was deliberate — it maximized retail sales windows through numismatic distributors rather than through any domestic circulation channel.
Cook Islands has no mint of its own; this piece was almost certainly produced by the Pobjoy Mint in Surrey, which held long-running contracts with Pacific island territories for exactly this category of collector issue.