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MARSHALL HOLE 3d CURRENCY CARD - BOER WAR  - SCARCE
MARSHALL HOLE 3d CURRENCY CARD - BOER WAR  - SCARCE

MARSHALL HOLE 3d CURRENCY CARD - BOER WAR - SCARCE

1 was available / secondhand
R815.00 auction closed
Closed 29 Jul 20 22:00
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Free collection from Bedfordview, Johannesburg
The seller allows collection for this item and will be in contact with the full collection address once the order is ready. Ready for collection by Thursday, 20 June.
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Product details

Condition
Secondhand
Location
South Africa
Customer ratings:
Bob Shop ID
476654307

 

 

MARSHALL HOLE 3d CURRENCY CARD - BOER WAR  

CONDITION AS PER SCAN 

 

At the outbreak of the Boer War in 1899, the Boers captured the railway link between Kimberley and Bulawayo when they surrounded Vryburg and Mafeking. The railway fed supplies and mail from the Cape Colony to Rhodesia. As supplies became scare, so did gold and silver coinage. The lack of coinage threatened to strip farms and mines of African labourers, whose wages had to be paid regularly.Hugh Marshall Hole, serving as Government Secretary to Matabeleland and Civil Commissioner of Bulawayo, suggested the use of stamps (of which they had a large supply) attached to cards bearing an order on the fiscal officer (Civil Commissioner) to pay the value of the stamps if presented after 1st August, 1900. The administration was confident that the railway would resume at this time. 

The Administrator, Arthur Lawley, agreed to the cards on the condition that they bear the Civil Commissioner’s signature. A metal die was prepared for Marshall Hole and the Standard Bank agreed to treat the cards as cash.

It was believed that the Africans hoarded silver but not copper, so the lowest value to be produced was 3d (which was the smallest silver coinage available). Approximately £20,000 worth of cards were issued in the values of 3d, 6d, 1/-, 2/-. 2/6d and 10/-. The currency tension was eased with the relief of Mafeking on May 16th, 1900. £19,000 worth of cards were redeemed by October, 1900 when the cards were removed from circulation.  Description with thanks to the Rhodesian Study Circle.

 

 

 

 

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