This note was part of a wave of collector-oriented legal tender issues that proliferated among small Caribbean nations in the early 1980s, when several governments — Antigua & Barbuda among them — recognized that limited-mintage commemorative currency could generate foreign exchange revenue with essentially zero circulation cost. The 1981 independence anniversary provided the occasion.
Gold foil construction makes these mechanically fragile; creasing is irreversible and common, which means genuinely flat examples are harder to find than the original print run would suggest.
This note was part of a wave of collector-oriented legal tender issues that proliferated among small Caribbean nations in the early 1980s, when several governments — Antigua & Barbuda among them — recognized that limited-mintage commemorative currency could generate foreign exchange revenue with essentially zero circulation cost. The 1981 independence anniversary provided the occasion.
Gold foil construction makes these mechanically fragile; creasing is irreversible and common, which means genuinely flat examples are harder to find than the original print run would suggest.