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Thereafter, voyageur dollars were struck each year through 1966, except in years when a commemorative dollar was struck for circulation (e.g. 1939, 1949, 1958 1964). In 1967, a special "flying goose" design was struck for the Canadian Centennial.
The voyageur design was used on the dollar until 1986. [1] It was then replaced with the 1987 Canadian 1-dollar coin (colloquially known as the "loonie"). 1967 marked the end of the silver dollar as a business strike, or a coin issued for circulation. After 1967, the dollar coin was made of nickel, except for non-circulating commemorative ...
It featured a voyageur (French-Canadian fur trader) and an indigenous man, paddling a birch-bark canoe laden with furs, with the northern lights in the background. [2] Although intended as a commemorative coin, it continued to be issued until 1986, the year before the Loonie was introduced. For information on the Voyageur dollar, see: Voyageur ...
Voyageur Dollar: Emanuel Hahn: 428,707 $1.00 1939 Royal Visit: Emanuel Hahn: 1,363,816 $1.00 1949 Newfoundland Entry Into Confederation Thomas Shingles: 672,218 $1.00 1958 Totem Pole: Stephen Trenka 3,039,630 $1.00 1964 Confederation Meetings Commemorative Dinko Vodanovic 7,296,832 $1.00 1967 Canadian Centennial: Alex Colville and Myron Cook ...
1967 Kennedy Half Dollar. Auction record: $6,995. This rare coin is notable because it doesn’t contain a mint mark; the U.S. Mint deliberately didn’t include mint marks on coins produced from ...
The tenth annual convention was hosted by the Vancouver Numismatic Society. The Convention took place from August 15 to 17, 1963. For the first time ever, the C.N.A.’s official seal was incorporated into the design. The C.N.A. seal is an adaptation of Emanuel Hahn’s Voyageur Dollar reverse design. The reverse depicts a view of “The Lions ...
Dollar gain/loss on $250 investment: -$31.75. Balance: $218.25. As the above numbers show, two of the stocks had positive returns over the past year and two had negative returns. Your ending ...
The $1 coin (the "loonie") was released in 1987. The $1 banknote remained in issue and in circulation alongside the one-dollar coin for the next two years, until it was withdrawn in 1989. The coin was to be the voyageur-design silver (then nickel) dollar coins that had previously been in limited circulation. The dies were lost or stolen in ...