Logo Title
obverse
reverse
Museums Victoria / CC-BY
Context
Years: 1920–1936
Issuer: Canada Issuer flag
Ruler: George V
Currency:
(since 1858)
Total mintage: 12,205,506
Material
Diameter: 23.62 mm
Weight: 5.83 g
Silver weight: 4.66 g
Thickness: 1.3 mm
Shape: Round
Composition: Silver (80% Silver, 20% Copper)
Magnetic: No
Technique: Milled
Alignment: Medal alignment
Obverse
OBVERSE ↑
flip
Reverse
REVERSE ↑
References
KM: #Click to copy to clipboard24a
Numista: #372
Value
Exchange value: 0.25 CAD = $0.18
Bullion value: $13.19
Inflation-adjusted value: 4.14 CAD

Obverse

Description:
King George V crowned, left-facing bust.
Inscription:
GEORGIVS V DEI GRA: REX ET IND:IMP:
Translation:
George V by the Grace of God King and Emperor of India
Script: Latin
Language: Latin

Reverse

Description:
The face value, "CANADA," and two maple boughs with a crown surround it.
Inscription:
25

CENTS

CANADA

1927
Script: Latin

Edge

Reeded

Categories

Symbol> Crown
Symbol> Wreath


Mintings

YearMint MarkMintageQualityCollection
19201,975,278
1921597,337
1927468,096
19282,114,178
19292,690,562
1930968,748
1931537,815
1932537,994
1933421,282
1934384,350
1935537,772
1936972,094

Historical background

In the aftermath of the First World War, Canada in 1920 faced a complex and transitional currency situation. The nation was still operating without a central bank, relying instead on a system where private chartered banks issued their own paper notes, backed by federal government gold reserves held in Ottawa. This system, governed by the Dominion Notes Act and the Bank Act, had functioned through the war but under significant strain. To finance the war effort, the federal government had suspended gold convertibility in 1914, moving Canada off the classical gold standard and onto a "gold exchange standard." This meant currency was no longer directly redeemable for gold coin by the public, but the government maintained a fixed gold price to settle international balances.

The immediate post-war period was marked by economic turbulence, including a sharp but short-lived inflationary boom followed by a severe deflationary recession beginning in late 1920. The money supply had expanded significantly during the war, and the persistence of high inflation into early 1920 prompted the government and the banking community to take corrective action. A key policy shift was the official resumption of gold convertibility for Dominion notes at the pre-war parity in mid-1920, a move intended to restore monetary discipline and international confidence. However, this return to a form of the gold standard coincided with the global downturn, exacerbating deflationary pressures as Canada sought to maintain its fixed exchange rate with gold and the U.S. dollar.

Consequently, the currency landscape of 1920 was one of contradiction and pressure. While the formal gold standard was reinstated, the practical reality was one of tight money, falling prices, and rising unemployment. The chartered banks' note-issuing privilege was becoming increasingly anachronistic, and the lack of a central monetary authority to manage the currency and act as a lender of last resort was seen as a growing weakness. Thus, 1920 stands as a pivotal year where the strains of the old system, combined with the harsh economic transition from war to peace, set the stage for the future debates that would eventually lead to the creation of the Bank of Canada in 1935.

Series: 1920 Canada circulation coins

5 Cents obverse
5 Cents reverse
5 Cents
1920-1921
10 Cents obverse
10 Cents reverse
10 Cents
1920-1936
25 Cents obverse
25 Cents reverse
25 Cents
1920-1936
50 Cents obverse
50 Cents reverse
50 Cents
1920-1936
1 Cent obverse
1 Cent reverse
1 Cent
1920-1936
🌱 Very Common