Trivia: Some Important Australian Coins

Discussion in 'Coin Chat' started by Clinker, Jun 25, 2010.

  1. Clinker

    Clinker Coin Collector

    Australian Numismatics has become the central income producer for all Australian Mints. This Trivia article is about two of the NCLT coins struck in 2002 that I feel are of special numismatic note to coin collectors and investors. Mind you, the two coins are not business strike issues, but were struck in proof only. Both coins, though of different denominationS (1 Dollar and 10 Dollars) have a single theme; the first gold coins struck in Australia by the Adelaide Mint.

    Disclaimer: The following links lead to specific coin dealer websites offering this article's subject coins for sale. The links are provided so you may see photos of the actual coins and learn more of why they were struck. I do not endorse the coins, the firms, nor the prices. I, also, do not disapprove the coins, firms or prices.

    The first coin link is to the 2002 50mm 10 Dollars Proof which commemorates the 150th Anniversary of the type 1 Adelaide Pound (cruzis-coins.com photo and text)


    http://www.cruzis-coins.com/sovs/silv/2002a.html

    Two bonuses:

    1852 Adelaide Pound Type I (Die Crack at top Reverse):

    australianstamp.com photo:

    http://www.australianstamp.com/coin-web/aust/adelpnd/1852ad1.htm

    1852 Adelaide Pound Type II (No Die Crack on Reverse):

    australianstamp.com photo:

    http://www.australianstamp.com/coin-web/aust/adelpnd/1852ad2.htm

    The final subject coin is the 2002 1 Dollar Commemorative (130th Anniversary of Melbouirne Mint) featuring the reverses of the first two gold coins struck at Melbourne Mint in 1872:

    prospectsstampsandcoins.com photo:

    http://www.prospectstampsandcoins.com.au/web/royal_aust_mint/2002_coins/index.html

    Two bonusesonus.

    1872 Melbourne Sovereign with Shield Reverse:

    cruis-coins.com photo:

    http://www.cruzis-coins.com/sovs/1872m.html

    1872 Melbourne Sovereign with St. George Slaying the Dragon:

    A bonus. (goldsovereigns.co.uk photo)

    http://www.goldsovereigns.co.uk/1872sovereignyhstgeorge.html

    Thought they were numismatically significant to address...

    Clinker
     
  2. Avatar

    Guest User Guest



    to hide this ad.
  3. randygeki

    randygeki Coin Collector

    Great post Clinker
     
  4. Clinker

    Clinker Coin Collector

    Great, randygeki...

    to have you read and comment!

    Clinker
     
  5. tmoneyeagles

    tmoneyeagles Indian Buffalo Gatherer

    I think the gold sovereign with St. George slaying the dragon and Queen Victoria (Young Head) on the obverse is absolutely beautiful. Can't say that for the other coins, excluding the 1st out of the 2 sovereigns shown.
    Good post Clinker!
     
  6. chrisild

    chrisild Coin Collector

    Hmm, that link does not work for me. All I get, even when I go to the main page www.prospectstampsandcoins.com.au , is a "Forbidden - You don't have permission to access ..." error message. Oh well, not your fault.

    Apart from that, another interesting post. I do like "coins on coins", and modern pieces that are designed like some famous historical pieces ...

    Christian
     
  7. Clinker

    Clinker Coin Collector

    Hello tmoneyeagles and chrisild...

    Thanks a bunch and sorry, chrisild, about the link...

    Clinker
     
Draft saved Draft deleted

Share This Page