Logo Title
obverse
reverse
Museums Victoria / CC-BY

5 Cents (Nickel Discovery) – Canada

Circulating commemorative coins
Commemoration: 200th Anniversary of the Discovery of Nickel
Canada
Context
Year: 1951
Issuer: Canada Issuer flag
Ruler: George VI
Currency:
(since 1858)
Total mintage: 8,329,231
Material
Diameter: 21.23 mm
Weight: 4.54 g
Thickness: 1.7 mm
Composition: Nickel
Magnetic: Yes
Technique: Milled
Alignment: Medal alignment
Obverse
OBVERSE ↑
flip
Reverse
REVERSE ↑
References
KM: #Click to copy to clipboard48
Numista: #407
Value
Exchange value: 0.05 CAD = $0.04
Inflation-adjusted value: 0.65 CAD

Obverse

Description:
King George VI left-facing portrait.
Inscription:
GEORGIVS VI DEI GRATIA REX

HP
Translation:
George VI by the Grace of God King
Script: Latin
Language: Latin
Engraver: Thomas Shingles

Reverse

Description:
A nickel refinery above three maple leaves, with "NICKEL 1751-1951", the face value, and "CANADA". Canada was the world's leading nickel producer.
Inscription:
CANADA

NICKEL 5

1751-1951 CENTS

TS
Script: Latin
Designer and engraver: Stephen Trenka

Edge

Plain

Categories

Building
Industry


Mintings

YearMint MarkMintageQualityCollection
19518,329,231

Historical background

In 1951, Canada's currency system was firmly anchored in the Bretton Woods international monetary order, established after World War II. The Canadian dollar was pegged to the United States dollar at a fixed rate of approximately 1.00 CAD = 0.925 USD, which itself was convertible to gold at $35 per ounce. This fixed exchange rate provided stability for trade and investment, which was crucial for a nation whose economy was heavily dependent on exports, particularly natural resources and manufactured goods flowing to its southern neighbour and war-ravaged Europe. The Bank of Canada, operating under the 1934 Bank of Canada Act, managed this peg and was responsible for the nation's monetary policy, though its tools were more constrained by the requirements of maintaining the fixed parity.

Domestically, Canada was experiencing a period of robust post-war economic expansion and rising inflation pressures, partly due to the Korean War boom that began in 1950. This created a policy dilemma: the need to control inflation through higher interest rates conflicted with the desire to maintain the fixed exchange rate, as higher rates could attract destabilizing speculative capital inflows. Notably, Canada had already faced this tension and would, just a decade later in 1962, formally return to a fixed peg after a unique experiment with a floating exchange rate from 1950 to 1962. However, in 1951 specifically, the currency remained formally fixed, and the government utilized fiscal measures and direct controls more heavily than later decades to manage the overheated economy without abandoning its Bretton Woods commitment.

The physical currency in circulation reflected Canada's constitutional history and evolving identity. Banknotes, issued by the Bank of Canada, featured the portrait of King George VI, who would pass away the following year. These notes were bilingual, a practice established in 1937, but still carried predominantly British symbolism. Coins, minted by the Royal Canadian Mint, bore the effigy of the monarch and were decimal, with denominations like the silver dollar (containing 80% silver until 1968) and the popular "nickel" five-cent piece. Thus, the 1951 currency situation embodied a nation balancing international obligations, domestic economic pressures, and a cultural identity in transition within the broader Commonwealth framework.
🌱 Very Common