Logo Title
obverse
reverse
Uppsala Universitet, CC0
Context
Years: 1915–1920
Issuer: Cuba Issuer flag
Currency:
(since 1914)
Demonetization: 13 March 1962
Total mintage: 3,361,150
Material
Diameter: 28.9 mm
Weight: 10 g
Silver weight: 9.00 g
Shape: Round
Composition: Silver (90% Silver, 10% Copper)
Magnetic: No
Technique: Milled
Alignment: Coin alignment
Obverse
OBVERSE ↑
flip
Reverse
REVERSE ↓
References
KM: #Click to copy to clipboard14
Numista: #8581
Value
Exchange value: 0.40 CUP
Bullion value: $25.74

Obverse

Description:
Cuba's coat of arms with the country name curved above and the face value in letters curved below.
Inscription:
• REPUBLICA DE CUBA •

CUARENTA CENTAVOS
Translation:
REPUBLIC OF CUBA

FORTY CENTS
Script: Latin
Language: Spanish

Reverse

Description:
Five-pointed star with rays, "Fatherland and Freedom" above, date below, weight and fineness on sides.
Inscription:
PATRIA Y LIBERTAD

• 10 G. • 1920 • 900 M •
Translation:
Fatherland and Liberty

• 10 G. • 1920 • 900 M •
Script: Latin
Language: Spanish

Edge

Reeded

Categories

Symbols> Coat of Arms


Mintings

YearMint MarkMintageQualityCollection
19152,633,000
1915100Proof
1916188,000
191650Proof
1920540,000
1920Proof

Historical background

In 1915, Cuba’s currency situation was characterized by a period of relative stability and alignment with the United States, a direct legacy of the island's recent political and economic history. Following independence and the U.S. military occupation (1898-1902), the 1903 Reciprocity Treaty and the 1904 Monetary Law had firmly pegged the Cuban peso at par with the U.S. dollar. This created a bimetallic system where U.S. gold coins and silver pesos circulated interchangeably, backed by substantial U.S. dollar reserves held in New York banks. This dollarization fostered reliable trade and investment, crucial for the booming sugar industry, which was increasingly financed by American capital.

However, this stability was externally dependent and masked underlying vulnerabilities. The Cuban treasury's reliance on the U.S. for currency backing meant its monetary policy was not autonomous. Furthermore, the global economic pressures of World War I, which began in 1914, were beginning to exert influence. While Cuba initially experienced a sugar boom due to the war, international gold flows were becoming disrupted, and the price of silver—the metal for the Cuban peso coin—was subject to volatile global markets. This posed a latent threat to the parity system, as the intrinsic value of the silver peso could potentially diverge from its fixed dollar value.

Consequently, the currency landscape of 1915 was one of de facto dollarization under a managed peg, providing surface-level commercial confidence. The system was administratively simple and beneficial for the dominant export sector and U.S. commercial interests. Yet, it was fundamentally a colonial monetary holdover, leaving Cuba's financial system exposed to external shocks and decisions made in Washington and world commodity markets—a fragility that would be tested in the coming years as the war continued to reshape the global economic order.

Series: 1915 Cuba circulation coins

40 Centavos obverse
40 Centavos reverse
40 Centavos
1915-1920
1 Peso obverse
1 Peso reverse
1 Peso
1915-1934
10 Pesos obverse
10 Pesos reverse
10 Pesos
1915-1916
20 Pesos obverse
20 Pesos reverse
20 Pesos
1915-1916
1 Centavo obverse
1 Centavo reverse
1 Centavo
1915-1961
2 Centavos obverse
2 Centavos reverse
2 Centavos
1915-1916
10 Centavos obverse
10 Centavos reverse
10 Centavos
1915-1949
🌱 Common