Pancake racing as a British tradition traces its popular origin to Olney, Buckinghamshire, where a race has allegedly been run on Shrove Tuesday since 1445 — though the earliest documentary evidence is considerably more recent than that date suggests. Guernsey's decision to commemorate it under a Charles III obverse places the coin squarely in the early wave of post-Elizabethan novelty issues competing for collector attention in the commemorative bimetallic space.
Olney has raced against Liberal, Kansas since 1950, a transatlantic rivalry that remains active.
Pancake racing as a British tradition traces its popular origin to Olney, Buckinghamshire, where a race has allegedly been run on Shrove Tuesday since 1445 — though the earliest documentary evidence is considerably more recent than that date suggests. Guernsey's decision to commemorate it under a Charles III obverse places the coin squarely in the early wave of post-Elizabethan novelty issues competing for collector attention in the commemorative bimetallic space.
Olney has raced against Liberal, Kansas since 1950, a transatlantic rivalry that remains active.