Edward VIII's abdication in December 1936 created a numismatic oddity that persisted for decades: because he never had a coronation, very few territories issued coins bearing his effigy before the reign ended after just 326 days. Jersey was among the handful that did, producing a small copper-nickel circulation issue in 1936. This silver piece is a commemorative retroactive acknowledgment of that brief reign, struck some sixty-four years after the fact.
The abdication itself was driven by the British government's refusal to accept Wallis Simpson as queen consort — a constitutional standoff that Edward resolved by choosing her over the throne.
Edward VIII's abdication in December 1936 created a numismatic oddity that persisted for decades: because he never had a coronation, very few territories issued coins bearing his effigy before the reign ended after just 326 days. Jersey was among the handful that did, producing a small copper-nickel circulation issue in 1936. This silver piece is a commemorative retroactive acknowledgment of that brief reign, struck some sixty-four years after the fact.
The abdication itself was driven by the British government's refusal to accept Wallis Simpson as queen consort — a constitutional standoff that Edward resolved by choosing her over the throne.