Liberia's late-1990s and early-2000s commemorative output was prolific to the point of absurdity — hundreds of issues bearing foreign heads of state, American presidents, and world events, produced almost entirely for the collector market with no meaningful domestic circulation. Most were struck by the Pobjoy Mint or various European contractors, not in Monrovia. The Roosevelt piece falls squarely into this category: a licensing-era novelty issued while Liberia itself was mid-collapse under Charles Taylor's government.
The KM#934 designation places it within a sprawling series. Mintages were rarely controlled or disclosed.
Liberia's late-1990s and early-2000s commemorative output was prolific to the point of absurdity — hundreds of issues bearing foreign heads of state, American presidents, and world events, produced almost entirely for the collector market with no meaningful domestic circulation. Most were struck by the Pobjoy Mint or various European contractors, not in Monrovia. The Roosevelt piece falls squarely into this category: a licensing-era novelty issued while Liberia itself was mid-collapse under Charles Taylor's government.
The KM#934 designation places it within a sprawling series. Mintages were rarely controlled or disclosed.