Logo Title
obverse
reverse
Museums Victoria / CC-BY
Context
Years: 1858–1901
Issuer: Canada Issuer flag
Ruler: Victoria
Currency:
(since 1858)
Total mintage: 18,776,402
Material
Diameter: 18.03 mm
Weight: 2.32 g
Silver weight: 2.15 g
Shape: Round
Composition: Silver (92.5% Silver, 7.5% Copper)
Magnetic: No
Technique: Milled
Alignment: Coin alignment
Obverse
OBVERSE ↑
flip
Reverse
REVERSE ↓
References
KM: #Click to copy to clipboard3
Numista: #393
Value
Exchange value: 0.10 CAD = $0.07
Bullion value: $6.23

Obverse

Description:
Young Queen Victoria facing left, wearing a laurel wreath.
Inscription:
VICTORIA DEI GRATIA REGINA.

CANADA
Translation:
Victoria by the Grace of God Queen.

Canada
Script: Latin
Language: Latin

Reverse

Description:
The face value is encircled by a wreath of maple boughs and a crown.
Inscription:
10

CENTS

1858
Script: Latin

Edge

Reeded

Categories

Symbol> Crown
Symbol> Wreath


Mintings

YearMint MarkMintageQualityCollection
18581,216,402
18701,600,000
1871800,000
1871H1,870,000
1872H1,000,000
1874H600,000
1875H
1880H1,500,000
1881H950,000
1882H1,000,000
1883H300,000
1884150,000
1885400,000
1886
1887350,000
1888500,000
1889600,000
1890H450,000
1891800,000
1892520,000
1893
1894500,000
1896650,000
1898720,000
1899
19001,100,000
19011,200,000

Historical background

In 1858, Canada was in a period of significant monetary transition and confusion, operating without a unified national currency. The Province of Canada (present-day Ontario and Quebec) was awash in a complex mixture of foreign and domestic coinage. British gold sovereigns and silver coins circulated alongside Spanish and Mexican silver dollars, U.S. gold coins, and even French francs. Crucially, the primary paper money consisted of banknotes issued by numerous private chartered banks, the value of which depended entirely on the solvency and reputation of the issuing institution, leading to frequent instability and discounting.

This chaotic system prompted the colonial government to take decisive action. Inspired by the British shift to a gold standard in the early 1850s, the Province of Canada passed the Currency Act of 1857, which took practical effect in 1858. This landmark legislation decimalized the currency, replacing the old Halifax pound (£1 Halifax = $4) with a new dollar unit divided into 100 cents. More importantly, it made the new Canadian dollar the sole official unit of account, requiring all government accounts to be kept in dollars and cents and disallowing the use of British sterling in future transactions.

However, 1858 was a year of implementation, not immediate resolution. While the government had established the legal framework, the new Canadian coins (the first struck at the Royal Mint in London in 1858) were only beginning to enter circulation. The U.S. gold dollar was also declared legal tender to facilitate trade. Consequently, the old mixed-currency system persisted in daily life alongside the new decimal framework. Thus, 1858 stands as the pivotal year when Canada legally committed to its own distinct decimal currency, setting the foundation for a uniform monetary system, even though the full practical realization of that system lay in the future.
🌱 Common