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Jardines Galleries · Educational tokens · Cape Province Education Department

Fibre Teaching Coins of the Union.

Model money for South African classrooms. Pressed-fibre replicas of circulating coins, dated to match the real coinage, used to teach Cape Province schoolchildren the £.s.d. system through the 1930s. Officially titled "Models of South African Coins" / "Modelle van Suid Afrikaanse Muntstukke." The unique fact: they were almost certainly struck using the official dies at the Pretoria Mint — making them the only educational tokens in South African numismatics produced from circulating-coin dies.

Teaching £.s.d. in the 1930s

In the early decades of the twentieth century, the Union of South Africa's monetary system was denominated in pounds, shillings, and pence — the same £.s.d. structure inherited from medieval Britain, with its peculiar arithmetic: 12 pence to a shilling, 20 shillings to a pound, and a quarter-penny called a farthing. For schoolchildren in the 1930s, these conversions were not abstractions; they were everyday calculations required to count change at a shop counter or work out wages.

Teaching that system required physical money. From about 1930 to 1939, the Cape Province Education Department issued sets of pressed-fibre coins to schools throughout the province — and quite likely to schools in the other three Union provinces. The sets were officially titled in both languages: "Models of South African Coins" and "Modelle van Suid Afrikaanse Muntstukke."

What makes the issue numismatically interesting — rather than merely pedagogically curious — is the question of where they were made. The dates on the fibre tokens correspond exactly to the dates on the real circulating coins of the same years. This evidence strongly suggests the fibre tokens were produced at the Pretoria Mint using the same dies that struck the real currency. If so, they are unique among South African educational tokens.

Why fibre, why official dies

The material

Why fibre?

The tokens are made of a pressed-fibre material — a cardboard-like composition, denser and more durable than paper but softer than plastic. The choice was practical: fibre is lightweight, cheap to produce in quantity, and safe for classroom handling. The tokens were never intended for circulation, so the absence of metal didn't matter; the design fidelity to real coins was what mattered for teaching.

The production

The Pretoria Mint argument

Pierre H. Nortje (Western Cape Numismatic Society) summarises: "the fact that the exact dates of the real coins appear on these fibre coins suggests strongly that they were produced using the official dies, likely at the Pretoria Mint." The 1931 George V farthing token, for instance, corresponds to a real farthing year that is now extremely scarce in metal — exactly the kind of detail one wouldn't expect from a private fibre manufacturer working without access to mint records.

— The thesis · Engelbrecht, 1987 —

"The years of the real coins are the same as those of the fibre tokens — for example the George V farthing dated 1931, etc. This indicates that the fibre tokens were probably produced using the official dies at the Pretoria Mint."

C.L. Engelbrecht · Money in South Africa · 1987

The sets — what was in each box

Original surviving boxes give an exact accounting of contents. Nine denominations spanning the full £.s.d. range, with quantities calibrated for classroom use — more pennies than half-crowns, more half-crowns than pounds, since the smaller denominations were the ones children would handle most often.

Denomination Value Per Box Colour & Appearance
Farthing ¼d 12 Bronze-coloured fibre
Half Penny ½d 12 Bronze-coloured fibre
Penny 1d 24 Bronze-coloured fibre
Threepence 3d 20 Silver-coloured fibre
Sixpence 6d 20 Silver-coloured fibre
Shilling 1s 20 Silver-coloured fibre
Half Crown 2/6 10 Silver-coloured fibre
Ten Shillings 10s 10 Gold-coloured fibre disk
One Pound £1 10 Gold-coloured fibre disk
— Tokens per box — 138 9 denominations · 3 colour tiers
Note: the ten shilling and one pound tokens are larger gold-coloured disks representing the gold coinage of the period. They do not carry the detailed designs of the smaller denominations — instead they are plain disks with the value indicated. This matches the contemporary perception of gold sovereigns and half-sovereigns as store-of-value pieces rather than everyday currency.

George V vs George VI

The dated range divides cleanly into two reign periods, separated by the 1936 abdication year in which no Edward VIII coins ever entered Union circulation. The two halves trade at very different prices — George V tokens are an order of magnitude rarer than George VI.

Older reign · Scarce

George V issues

c.1931 – 1935
  • Years identified: 1931, 1933, 1935.
  • The 1931 and 1933 tokens are extremely rare — none have been tracked in sales records, and very few are known to exist in collections.
  • The 1935 tokens are scarce but slightly more available than 1931/1933.
  • These correspond to the actual scarce years of Union coinage in metal.
Newer reign · More available

George VI issues

1937 – 1939
  • Years identified: 1937, 1938, 1939.
  • These are the most commonly encountered fibre teaching coins.
  • Many more sets were produced during the George VI era.
  • 1939 tokens exist (real 1939 Union coins are also common).

Pierre H. Nortje's research for the Western Cape Numismatic Society (May 2024) confirms that the George V tokens from 1931 and 1933 are virtually unobtainable, while the George VI tokens appear on the market with some regularity. Anyone hunting a complete year-and-reign run is effectively pursuing the 1931 and 1933 farthings — the rest of the set will assemble eventually; those two are the bottleneck.

Rarity & values

Per the MTB South Africa Tokens catalogue (Carroll & Jacobs, 2021), complete original boxes with all coins present are rare — and the box itself adds significant value. The table below covers individual token values across the three reign tiers.

Complete sets

  • George VI complete set in original box$1,000 to $3,000 depending on condition and completeness.
  • George V complete set (1935)$3,000 to $5,000 · extremely rare.
  • George V 1931 or 1933 tokens — individual specimens have not appeared at auction in recent decades; value indeterminable but would be significant.

Individual tokens

Denomination George VI · 1937–1939 George V · 1935 George V · 1931 / 1933
Farthing (¼d) $10 – $20 $30 – $50 No recent sales
Half Penny (½d) $10 – $20 $30 – $50 No recent sales
Penny (1d) $15 – $25 $40 – $60 No recent sales
Threepence (3d) $20 – $30 $50 – $80 No recent sales
Sixpence (6d) $20 – $30 $50 – $80 No recent sales
Shilling (1s) $25 – $35 $60 – $100 No recent sales
Half Crown (2/6) $30 – $40 $70 – $120 No recent sales
Ten Shillings (10s) $40 – $60 $100 – $150 No recent sales
One Pound (£1) $50 – $80 $120 – $200 No recent sales
Auction record: a complete George VI set in original box sold at a South African auction in 2022 for the equivalent of approximately $2,200 — squarely in the middle of the MTB-catalogue range and the most recent benchmark for a complete-with-box example.

Boxes & identification

Original boxes were sturdy cardboard with a hinged lid, labelled in both English and Afrikaans, often with a printed contents label. Surviving boxes are themselves collectible; box condition (wear, splits, missing labels) materially affects total set value. The six quick-checks below cover what to look for in any single piece.

01 · Material

Fibre texture

Cardboard-like but denser and more durable than paper. Distinct from plastic — has a slight grain.

02 · Colour

Three tiers

Bronze for low denominations, silver for middle, gold for 10s and £1 disks.

03 · Date

Year determines value

Always check the date — 1931 and 1933 are virtually untracked; 1935 is scarce; 1937–1939 are common.

04 · Monarch

Two portraits

George V shows the older king; George VI shows the younger king. Same Pretoria Mint dies as the metal coinage.

05 · Box

Original packaging

Rectangular cardboard with separate compartments per denomination. Bilingual labels. Adds significant value.

06 · Designs

Disk vs detailed

Smaller denominations carry detailed coin designs; the 10s and £1 are plain gold-coloured disks with value only.

Span
~10 yrs
c.1930 – 1939
Denominations
9
¼d to £1 · Three colour tiers
Tokens per box
138
Calibrated for class use
George VI complete set
$1k – $3k
MTB · 2022 sale ~$2,200
— Sources —
  • Engelbrecht, C.L.Money in South Africa, 1987 — the Pretoria Mint dies attribution.
  • Nortje, Pierre H. — "Fibre 'Teaching Coins' of the Union of South Africa," Western Cape Numismatic Society, May 2024 — rarity confirmation and the 1931 farthing observation.
  • Carroll, Dr. Morgan & Jacobs, AllynMTB South Africa Tokens, 2021 — value benchmarks and complete-set ranges.
  • South African Mint — historical archives.
  • Personal collections and auction records, 2020–2025.
  • Cross-references: The Pretoria Mint, The SA Pound Symbol (£.s.d. context), OFS Patterns.

Revision history

22 February 2026 Initial build — expanded with verified data from Engelbrecht, Nortje (WCNS), and the MTB Token Catalogue.
The South African Numismatic Library A division of Jardines Galleries · © 2026