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Jardines Galleries · Biographical Reference

The People Behind the Coins.

Biographies of the presidents, engravers, mint officials, bank governors, and key collectors who shaped South African numismatics — from Thomas Burgers commissioning the first gold coin to Otto Schultz at the Berlin Mint to P.J. Kloppers at Pilgrim's Rest, and the modern researchers and society leaders carrying the work forward.

Curated by Ben & Johan Ungerer · The Jardines Curatorial Desk

— Further reading —

The Gold Behind the Coins

For a deeper exploration of Otto Schultz's work at the Berlin Mint and P.J. Kloppers' role in creating the Veldpond — including the gold sources behind the 1892 ZAR coinage — see the dedicated research page.

Read the research →

Presidents & Authorities

The presidents and founding officials whose authority commissioned the coins, decorations, and instruments before any engraver cut a die or any mint pressed a planchet. In pre-Union republican government, the line from presidential signature to struck artefact was direct — sometimes uncomfortably so, as the Volksraad pandemonium that greeted the 1874 Burgerspond demonstrated.

Featured · President of the ZAR

Thomas François Burgers

1834 – 1881 · Fourth President, Zuid-Afrikaansche Republiek

Burgers' four-year presidency (1872 – 1877) produced more numismatic, civic, and cultural foundations than any other single window in pre-Union South African history. A theologian and intellectual by formation, he treated the office as an instrument for state-building — commissioning the symbols of an officially-recognised republic before the Volksraad had agreed to authorise them. In a single calendar year, 1874, he laid down three of those foundations.

His administration fell to British annexation under Sir Theophilus Shepstone in April 1877. The three projects survived in fragments — the coins as collector rarities, the anthem as a republican memory, the mint as an unanswered archival question. Three foundational acts, halted before completion, on presidential authority alone.

— The coin —

The Burgerspond

South Africa's first gold coin. 837 struck at Heaton's Mint, Birmingham, from Transvaal-mined gold. Presented to a Volksraad that erupted in pandemonium at the sight of his face on the obverse. Read the reference →

— The cross —

The Burgers' Cross

South Africa's first Presidential Award, recognised as such by recent WCNS research. Three gold crosses pattée — two Pilgrim's Rest nurses, plus Catharina van Rees of Utrecht, composer of the ZAR national anthem. Read the reference →

— The mint —

The mint that almost was

Prof Arndt's 1922 New York archives discovery: a contemporary statement that Burgers had ordered actual mint machinery. Eighteen years before the Pretoria Mint finally opened. No surviving order or shipping manifest has yet been found.

Engravers and Designers

Beyond Schultz and Kloppers, a small constellation of British, Australian, and South African artists supplied the dies and motifs that defined more than a century of currency — from the Royal Mint engravers of the Burgerspond and Union pound to the Mint designers behind today's commemoratives.

Royal Mint Engraver

Leonard Charles Wyon

1826 – 1891

Engraver to the Royal Mint, son of William Wyon. He prepared the dies for the 1874 Burgerspond, a private commission for the South African Republic. His initials "L.C.W." appear on the obverse of the Burgerspond.

Sculptor · Krugerrand

Coert Steynberg

1905 – 1982

Prominent South African sculptor. He became the first South African artist on coinage when his springbok design was used for the 1947 Royal Visit Crown. That same springbok was later adopted for the reverse of the Krugerrand (1967), making it one of the most widely recognised designs in the world.

Medallist · Union

George Kruger Gray

1880 – 1964

British artist and medallist. He designed the ship reverse for the Union halfpenny and penny (1923 – 1960) and the protea for the sixpence (1925 – 1960). His initials "KG" can be found on the ship coins, on the waves below the hull.

Sculptor · Royal Portrait

Sir Bertram Mackennal

1863 – 1931

Australian sculptor. He created the obverse portrait of King George V used on Union coinage from 1923 to 1936. His initials "B.M." appear on the truncation of the King's bust.

SA Mint Designer

Tommy Sasseen

South African Mint

South African designer who worked for the South African Mint. He designed the obverse of the 1-cent coin (1965, with the koppie and aloe), the reverse of the 10-cent coin (aloe plant), and the 20-cent reverse (cabbage tree). His initials "TS" appear on these coins.

Designer · 1995 RWC

Arthur Sutherland

South Africa

South African artist. He designed the obverse of the 1995 Rugby World Cup R2 silver coin — a portrait of a rugby player. His initials "AS" appear on the obverse.

Designer · 1995 RWC

Linda Lotriet

South Africa

South African designer. She created the reverse of the 1995 Rugby World Cup R2 silver coin, featuring three rugby players in action. Her initials "LL" appear on the reverse.

SA Mint Designer

Susan Erasmus

South African Mint

Designer at the South African Mint. She designed the 2010 FIFA World Cup R5 circulation coin (the "Football and Map" design) and the 2013 Mandela "Life of a Legend" R2 coin (Mandela's portrait).

SA Mint Designer

Nathalee Frankel

South African Mint

South African Mint designer. She created the reverse of the 2016 Crown & Tickey coin (the Pratley Putty tribute) and several Natura series reverses.

Mint Officials

The administrators and technicians who built and ran the mints — from the German engineer who equipped Pretoria's first presses to the modern South African Mint MDs who oversaw the 2021 Lost Hoard discovery.

Director, Pretoria Mint · 1892

Friedrich Munscheid

Former Works Inspector of the Royal Prussian Mint, appointed Director of the Pretoria Mint. The German technical advisor who helped equip the new mint and trained local staff.

Royal Mint Branch, Pretoria

J.T. Becklake

Official of the Royal Mint branch in Pretoria. Published the mintage figures for ZAR and Union coinage in 1965 — figures still cited as standard today.

Historian · 1939

Prof. E.H.D. Arndt

South African historian, author of The South African Mints (1939) — a detailed account of minting operations that remains the foundational work on the subject.

Deputy Director, Berlin Mint

Dr. Hugo Hammerich

Preserved the records of ZAR coinage produced in Berlin and published Die Deutschen Reichsmünzen (1905) — a key source for ZAR mintage details.

Former MD, South African Mint

Honey Mamobolo

Former Managing Director of the South African Mint who announced the Lost Hoard discovery in 2021 — one of the most consequential modern numismatic events in SA.

Former MD, South African Mint

Tumi Tsehlo

Former Managing Director of the South African Mint, predecessor to Mamobolo, who oversaw the modernisation programme through the 2010s.

IT Architect · 1990s

Dion Swanepoel

Architect of the Mint's IT department and the original CIM (Computer-Integrated Manufacturing) implementation in the 1990s — the digital backbone of modern SA coinage.

Co-architect, Mint Systems · 1990s

Marc van Gool

Co-architect of the Mint's computer systems alongside Swanepoel, instrumental in the rollout of the integrated production line.

Berlin · 1891

Ludwig Loewe & Co.

Not an individual but the Berlin firm that manufactured the two mint presses ordered by President Kruger in 1891 — the machinery that produced the entire ZAR series.

Private Mint, Berlin

L. Ostermann

Owner of a private mint in Berlin that struck the 25 "Glück auf Transvaal" commemorative medals in copper.

Governors of the South African Reserve Bank

Every SARB Governor since 1921 — and the banknote series each signature appears on. Their authority is what gives the paper its standing.

Governor Term Signature appears on
W.H. Clegg1921 – 1931First SARB banknotes
J. Postmus1931 – 1945First SARB banknotes
M.H. de Kock1945 – 1962Pre-decimal and first decimal notes
Dr. Gerhard Rissik1962 – 1967First decimal notes
Dr. Theunis de Jongh1967 – 1980Van Riebeeck series notes
Dr. Gerhard de Kock1981 – 1989Van Riebeeck series notes
Dr. Chris Stals1989 – 1999Mamelodi (Big Five) series notes
Tito Mboweni1999 – 2009Mamelodi (Big Five) series notes
Gill Marcus2009 – 2014Mandela series notes
Lesetja Kganyago2014 – presentMandela series and polymer notes

Collectors and Researchers

The collectors whose cabinets and the researchers whose books built the modern South African numismatic record — including the named collections that recur as provenance lines in today's auction catalogues.

Author · ZAR Coinage · 1974

Elias Levine

Author of The Coinage and Counterfeits of the Zuid-Afrikaansche Republiek (1974) — the foundational work on ZAR coins. His personal cabinet provides provenance for the Sammy Marks Tickey.

Compiler · The Standard Catalogue

Brian Hern

Compiler of The Standard Catalogue of South African Coins, Medals and Tokens (annual) — the essential price guide and reference for South African collectors.

Secretary, WCNS

Pierre H. Nortje

Secretary of the Western Cape Numismatic Society and author of numerous research articles on ZAR and Union coinage.

Collector · Sold by Noonans

Dr. Lawrence A. Adams

Collector and researcher whose cabinet was sold through Noonans — a recurring provenance on important SA pieces in recent auctions.

ZAR Half-Ponds · Spink 2023

Dr. Frank Becker

Formed a renowned collection of ZAR half-ponds, sold by Spink in 2023 — one of the most important modern dispersals of the series.

Heritage · 2025

Gatsby Collection

Modern collection of ZAR and commemorative coins, sold by Heritage in 2025. A recent benchmark for ZAR market depth.

Heritage · 2012

Orange River Collection

Important collection of ZAR gold, sold by Heritage in 2012 — long the reference point for top-end ZAR pricing.

Sammy Marks Tickey · 2013

Read Collection

Early collection that included a Sammy Marks Tickey (sold 2013) — a key provenance line for one of the rarest of all SA coins.

Berlin · 1954

E.A. Hohmann

Owned two 1892 proof sets and two "Glück auf Transvaal" medals, purchased in Berlin in 1954. A direct provenance link to the Berlin Mint records.

Complete Graded Union Set

Bakewell Collection

Complete graded Union of South Africa set, featured in the PCGS Set Registry — a benchmark complete-set assembly.

Bergman Trophy · Revival

Thomas van der Spuy

First recipient of the revived Bergman Trophy for his complete graded ZAR set — a major modern milestone in SA collecting.

Author · Bergman Trophy Donor

Walter Bergman

Donor of the Bergman Trophy and author of A History of Regular and Emergency Paper Money Issues of South Africa (1968).

"Oom Jack" · SANS Founding · 1941

Major J. Piek

First President of the South African Numismatic Society in 1941 — the founding figure of organised SA numismatics.

Founding President, WCNS · 2021

Waldo Human

Founding President of the Western Cape Numismatic Society in 2021. Passed away in 2022.

Current President, WCNS

Jonathan Odes

Current President of the Western Cape Numismatic Society, continuing the work begun by Waldo Human.

Presidents
1
Authorising figures
Engravers
10
Designers profiled
Mint officials
10
Directors and chroniclers
SARB governors
10
1921 to present
Collectors
15
Cabinets and authors

The references

  • Hern, Brian.The Standard Catalogue of South African Coins, Medals and Tokens (annual).
  • Western Cape Numismatic Society articles2023 – 2025. Pierre Nortje's research corpus, including the Burgers' Cross monograph and the Perfect Forgery essay series.
  • South African Mint publications and newsletters.Modern designer credits and Lost Hoard reporting.
  • Auction cataloguesHeritage, Noonans, Spink — the named-cabinet provenance lines that recur in the modern market.
  • PCGS CoinFacts and NGC Coin reference databases.Designer attribution, mintmark, and series detail.
  • Berlin Münzkabinett / museum-digitalSüdafrika: 1892. Original Schultz wax models and ZAR die archive.
  • Heritage AuctionsSouth Africa: Republic gold "Veld" Pond 1902 MS65 NGC.
  • Arndt, Prof. E.H.D.The South African Mints (1939) — and the 1922 New York archival note on Burgers' mint-machinery enquiry, preserved by WCNS.

Revision history

22 February 2026 Initial build.
3 March 2026 Expanded with new research on Otto Schultz (Berlin Mint) and P.J. Kloppers (Veldpond). Added link to gold-sources research.
15 May 2026 Full v3 rebuild · new Presidents & Authorities section added with Thomas Burgers as the founding biography · three-act subgrid linking to Burgerspond and Burgers' Cross reference pages · stats strip expanded from four to five columns · section-anchor nav extended · Sasseen entry retained as the bridge to the Perfect Forgery research.
The South African Numismatic Library A division of Jardines Galleries · © 2026