Logo Title
obverse
reverse
Museums Victoria / CC-BY
Context
Years: 1911–1936
Issuer: Australia Issuer flag
Ruler: George V
Currency:
(1788—1966)
Total mintage: 66,678,025
Material
Diameter: 16 mm
Weight: 1.41 g
Silver weight: 1.30 g
Thickness: 0.8 mm
Shape: Round
Composition: 92.5% Silver
Magnetic: No
Technique: Milled
Alignment: Medal alignment
Obverse
OBVERSE ↑
flip
Reverse
REVERSE ↑
References
KM: #Click to copy to clipboard24
Numista: #4203
Value
Bullion value: $3.73

Obverse

Description:
George V left-facing portrait with encircling inscription.
Inscription:
GEORGIVS V D.G.BRITT: OMN:REX F.D.IND:IMP: ·

B. M.
Translation:
George the Fifth, by the Grace of God, King of all the Britains, Defender of the Faith, Emperor of India.
Script: Latin
Language: Latin

Reverse

Description:
Australian coat of arms flanked by kangaroo and emu, with value above and date (and mintmark) below.
Inscription:
THREEPENCE

ADVANCE AUSTRALIA

1916

M
Script: Latin

Edge

Plain


Mintings

YearMint MarkMintageQualityCollection
19114,000,000
1911Proof
19122,400,000
19141,600,000
1915800,000
1916M1,913,000
1916M25Proof
1917MProof
1917M3,808,000
1918M3,119,000
1918MProof
1919M3,201,000
1919MProof
1920M4,196,000
1920MProof
1921
1921M7,378,000
1921MProof
1922900
1922Proof
1923815,000
19242,014,000
1924Proof
19254,347,000
1925Proof
19266,158,000
1926Proof
19276,720,000
192750Proof
19285,008,000
1928Proof
19342,800,000
193450Proof
19352,800,000
1935Proof
19363,600,000
1936Proof

Historical background

In 1911, Australia stood on the cusp of a major monetary transformation, moving from a fragmented system towards a unified national currency. Since Federation in 1901, the nation's money supply remained a complex patchwork of British gold sovereigns, British silver and copper coinage, and a multitude of private banknotes issued by dozens of trading banks. This system was inefficient, with notes of varying design and security, and their value was only as reliable as the issuing bank's reputation, leading to periodic instability and confusion in interstate trade.

The push for a single, government-backed currency had been building for years, culminating in the landmark Australian Notes Act 1910 and the Bank Notes Tax Act 1910. These laws, enacted by the Andrew Fisher Labor government, effectively nationalised the note issue. They imposed a prohibitive 10% annual tax on private banknotes, driving them out of circulation, and proclaimed Australian government notes as the only legal tender. By 1911, the new, uniform series of Australian notes, featuring the portrait of King George V, was being circulated by the Commonwealth Treasury, marking the first time Australians used nationally issued paper money.

However, 1911 was a transitional year. While paper currency was now centralised, Australia did not yet have its own distinct coinage. Everyday transactions still relied heavily on British imperial coinage, from pennies to sovereigns. The final step towards a fully independent monetary system would come in 1913 with the Coinage Act, which introduced the Australian pound, divided into 20 shillings and 240 pence, and the establishment of the first Royal Australian Mint in Melbourne. Thus, 1911 represents the pivotal moment when Australia secured control over its paper currency, laying the essential groundwork for the complete sovereign monetary system that would follow.

Series: 1911 Australia circulation coins

1 Penny obverse
1 Penny reverse
1 Penny
1911-1936
3 Pence obverse
3 Pence reverse
3 Pence
1911-1936
6 Pence obverse
6 Pence reverse
6 Pence
1911-1936
1 Shilling obverse
1 Shilling reverse
1 Shilling
1911-1936
1 Florin obverse
1 Florin reverse
1 Florin
1911-1936
½ Sovereign obverse
½ Sovereign reverse
½ Sovereign
1911-1918
1 Sovereign obverse
1 Sovereign reverse
1 Sovereign
1911-1928
🌱 Very Common