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41/2 Bits Counterstamp on Peru 2 Reales KM# 95

Issuer Saint Vincent and the Grenadines
Year 1814-1818
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Currency Saint Vincent Dollar (1797-1818)
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Obverse lettering CAROLUS·IIII·DEI·GRATIA S IV B 1807
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Edge Reeded
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Additional information

Saint Vincent's fiscal administrators, facing a chronic shortage of small change common across the British Caribbean in the early nineteenth century, authorized counterstamping foreign silver to create locally sanctioned currency. The host coin — a Peruvian 2 Reales — was an opportunistic choice rather than a deliberate one, reflecting whatever Spanish colonial silver happened to be circulating in sufficient volume. The 4½ Bits denomination was peculiar to the Eastern Caribbean monetary system, where the Spanish real was locally reckoned as a "bit" at a fixed exchange rate against sterling.