Jardines Galleries · Anglo-Boer War · 1899 – 1902 · POW camp currency · Overseas & SA camps · Satirical medals
Concentration camp tokens & banknotes.
Emergency currency issued in Boer prisoner-of-war camps overseas — St Helena, Ceylon (Sri Lanka), India, and Bermuda — as well as in the Cape Town camps at Simon's Town (Bellevue) and Green Point. These notes and tokens represent a fascinating and often overlooked chapter of Anglo-Boer War numismatics. Some 20,000 Boers were shipped overseas after the prisoner-of-war camps in South Africa became seriously overcrowded following Paardeberg (February 1900). Under Regulation 22, prisoners weren't allowed to hold money — their financial affairs were controlled by camp commandants through canteen "Good For" vouchers. For the broader paper-money context, see Pre-1921 Banknotes.
~20,000 Boer prisoners shipped overseas
Ceylon · St Helena · Bermuda · India · After Paardeberg, Feb 1900After SA camps became seriously overcrowded post-Paardeberg, the British sent roughly 20,000 Boer prisoners to Bermuda, India, Ceylon (Sri Lanka), and St Helena.
Diyatalawa in Ceylon ("Boer Town") held ~5,000 prisoners. St Helena held 6,000 — including General Piet Cronjé and Kruger's grandson Commandant Eloff. Camp commandants issued miniature banknotes for credit balances; Diyatalawa One Rupee notes have sold for R28,000.
Bellevue & Green Point
Simon's Town & Cape Town · Six Bellevue + four Green Point denominationsTwo camps at Cape Town acted as transit holding before shipment overseas. Bellevue (Simon's Town, where the golf club now sits) opened February 1900 with the Cape Times printing six denominations of "Good For" vouchers.
Green Point opened with two camps (~2,000 prisoners), each with its own shop open five hours a day. G.W. Barnes' printed signature appears on all Green Point issues.
Overseas POW camps
Ceylon (Diyatalawa & Ragama) · St Helena · Bermuda & IndiaWith prisoner-of-war camps in South Africa seriously overcrowded after Paardeberg (February 1900), the British took the decision to ship prisoners overseas. Some 20,000 Boers went to Bermuda, India, Ceylon (Sri Lanka), and St Helena. Camp commandants issued miniature banknotes against prisoner credit balances; these are now among the rarer Anglo-Boer War paper-money issues.
Diyatalawa was the main Ceylon camp, known as "Boer Town". The first batch of prisoners arrived in Ceylon on 9 August 1900, and eventually some 5,000 prisoners were housed there. Prisoners could draw against their credit using miniature banknotes issued by the Camp Commandant.
- One Rupee note — 22 April 1901, serial 4109 — sold for R28,000 in 2022. A Diyatalawa One Rupee (serial 1524) sold at Noonans in 2005 for £160
- 50 Cent note — ND, serial 168, handstamped "March 1901" — sold at Spink for £340
Ragama camp was established for "dissidents and irreconcilables" — foreign volunteers, Germans, Hollanders, Irish Americans. In wartime correspondence, a Jewish POW named Jeannot Weinberg described them in a phrase that would echo through the camp's numismatic memory:
The phrase later inspired a famous satirical medal struck by another Ragama prisoner, see Medals section below.
From 1900 to 1902, 6,000 Boers were shipped to St Helena and housed in encampments on Deadwood Plain and Broad Bottom. Prisoners included General Piet Cronjé and Commandant Eloff, a grandson of Paul Kruger. Troublesome prisoners were confined to High Knoll, a large fort isolated on a hill top.
A rare cast bronze medal (1900) commemorates the camp, showing the arms of the ZAR above Kruger's head, Britannia, and on the reverse, the camp on the hill with the legend "TER GEDACHTENIS AAN DE BUEREN KRYGSGEVANGENEN".
Prisoners were also sent to Bermuda and India, though specific paper currency from these camps is less well-documented. John Ineson's authoritative work — Paper Currency of the Anglo-Boer War, 1899 – 1902 (Spink, 1999) — provides the definitive checklist and rarity guide for all known Boer War paper currency, including these overseas camps.
South African POW camps · Cape Town
Bellevue (Simon's Town) · Green Point Track · Transit camps before overseas shipmentDuring the Anglo-Boer War, two prisoner-of-war camps were established in Cape Town: the first at Simon's Town and the second at Green Point. These were transit camps where prisoners were temporarily housed before being sent overseas. Under Regulation 22, prisoners weren't allowed to hold money — their financial affairs were controlled by the Camp Commandant through "Good For" vouchers exchangeable at camp canteens.
The Bellevue camp was situated where the current Simon's Town golf club is, next to Penguin Beach. The first prisoners arrived in February 1900. According to Regulation 22, prisoners weren't allowed to have money in their possession; their financial affairs were controlled by the Camp Commandant. Prisoners could earn money in the form of "Good For" vouchers exchangeable for goods at the camp canteen.
There are six notes in the Bellevue series, printed by the Cape Times:
- Sixpence (6d) — white paper, black ink
- Shilling (1/-) — white paper, black/orange ink
- Two Shillings (2/-) — white paper, green ink
- Five Shillings (5/-) — blue paper, blue ink
- Ten Shillings (10/-) — white paper, purple ink
- Twenty Shillings (20/-) — white paper, brown ink
Two basic varieties exist. One reads "Payable on demand to Prisoners of War only at our Store, Simon's Town" (numbered, without censor handstamp); the other reads "Payable on demand to Prisoners of War only at our Canteen, Bellevue Camp, Simon's Town" (unnumbered, with blue "Censor Prisoners of War" handstamp). The store owner was W.N. Runciman, who later became Mayor of Simon's Town.
Two camps were situated at Green Point: the Green Point Track Camp (with approximately 2,000 prisoners) and the Sky View Camp (accommodating half that figure). They were established to relieve overcrowding after the arrival of 4,000 Boers taken prisoner at Paardeberg. Each camp had its own shop, open five hours a day, where prisoners could buy foodstuffs.
The Green Point "Good Fors" were issued in four denominations: 1 shilling, 2 shillings, 5 shillings (mauve), and 5 shillings (purple). They bear the printed signature of G.W. Barnes, Manager.
Auction records for Green Point notes:
- Set of 4 — 1/-, 2/-, 5/- mauve, 5/- purple, original watermarked remainders, about UNC — sold £100 (Auction 159)
- Similar set — sold £85 (Auction 156)
- Set of 3 — 1/-, 2/-, 5/- — sold £70 (Auction 146)
- Single 1/- note — sold £10 (Auction 146)
Medals & tokens from the camps
SCUM OF THE SCUM · St Helena POW Medal · Dutch Atrocities MedallionThree commemorative medals emerged from the camp experience. The most famous — and most darkly satirical — is the "SCUM OF THE SCUM" medal, struck post-war by a Dutch railway engineer who had been chained to a palm tree as punishment. The St Helena POW medal commemorates the island camp. The Dutch Atrocities Medallion, struck in the Netherlands, condemns the British treatment of Boers.
This satirical medal was made by Gerhardus Franciscus Keyzer, a Dutch engineer working for the Railway Company (N.Z.A.S.M.). He was captured on 5 April 1900 as Prisoner of War No. 2783 and sent to the Ragama Camp in Ceylon. To commemorate his experience, he produced medals after the war — likely struck over flattened ZAR coins.
British "civilization"
A man wearing a cap standing beside a palm tree, possibly chopping it down with a machete; a hut on the left. Legend: "BRITSCHE . 1902 . BESCHAVING" (British civilization).
The punishment phrase
Legend: "SCUM / OF THE / SCUM" around "RAGAMA KAMP HERINNERING" (Ragama Camp memory).
The obverse depicts Keyzer chained to a palm tree in the camp, left there in the full sun as a punishment. The reverse refers to the English government and/or to the other prisoners. Auction record: one example sold for €1,690 (approx. $1,940) at MA-Shops. Another sold at Heritage Auctions Europe for a starting price of €750.
A cast bronze medal, unsigned, showing the arms of the ZAR above the head of Paul Kruger, with Britannia and the arms of St Helena at the sides. The reverse depicts the camp on a hill with the legend "TER GEDACHTENIS AAN DE BUEREN KRYGSGEVANGENEN". A copy sold at Noonans in 2008 for £260.
This medallion (Hern-208) commemorates the suffering in the concentration camps. The obverse depicts two mounted knights in armour engaged in combat, with foot soldiers below — referencing the Spanish in the Netherlands (1568 – 1648). The reverse shows a burning Boer farmhouse with the legend "DE ENGELSHEN IN ZUID AFRIKA" and the dates 1899 – 1901.
A choice example graded NGC MS 63 Brown sold for 130 CHF.
References & further reading
Ineson · Hern · WCNS Nortje · The standard works- Ineson, John. Paper Currency of the Anglo-Boer War, 1899 – 1902. London: Spink, 1999. The definitive work — covers Boer currency, besieged towns, POW camps in South Africa and overseas, Rhodesian postage stamp money, and rarity guides
- Hern, Brian. Hern's Handbook on South African Banknotes & Paper Money (2010) — illustrations and details of Bellevue camp notes
- Western Cape Numismatic Society — "Boer War P.O.W. Money of the Cape Town Camps" (Pierre H. Nortje, February 2024). Detailed historical research on Simon's Town and Green Point camps
Sources
Auction archives · Specialist societies · Reference works- London Coins — auction archives
- Noonans Mayfair — auction archives
- Heritage Auctions Europe
- Western Cape Numismatic Society — Pierre H. Nortje research
- Spink — auction archives
- MA-Shops
- Numisor SA
- American Numismatic Society — Ineson reference
Library cross-references
Adjacent topics · Pre-1921 era · Banknote printers · Siege materialPre-1921 Banknotes
The free-banking era's full sweep — government notes 1782 – 1841, private banks 1837 – 1920, ZAR government notes, siege notes. The POW camp notes catalogued here are one wartime strand of that period.
— Adjacent token cluster —Griqua Tokens
South Africa's first autonomous coinage (c.1815 – 1816) — the LMS-commissioned copper and silver tokens from Thomas Halliday. Different era, same library cluster of token/medal material.
— Who printed the camp notes —Banknote Printers
The Cape Times printed the Bellevue series; Townshend & Son (Mafeking) printed the Mafeking siege notes. Wartime printing arrangements differed sharply from the standard London-based contracts.
— Banknotes hub —South African Banknotes
The complete SA paper-currency hub — every series from 1782 to the present polymer issues, with signatories, printers, and historical context for each era.