When I heard the Royal Canadian Mint had made a
special railway coin to mark the 150th anniversary of Canada, I
thought I’d check it out.
Naively, I thought that might be the only railway
coin the Mint has made. Boy, was I wrong!
Turns out the Mint has made a number of railway-themed
coins over the years to commemorate achievements, specific railways and even
locomotives.
(It also made a $10 bill featuring
a VIA Rail locomotive.)
But back to the anniversary edition; the Mint
had a competition to create its new 2017 Canada 150 circulation coin
series featuring the work of five Canadians selected by popular vote.
Each coin had to be designed according to a theme. The
two-dollar coin's theme was Our Wonders, the one-dollar theme was Our
Achievements, the 25-cent coin theme was Canada's Future, the 10-cent coin
theme was Our Character and the five-cent coin theme was Our Passions.
The winner of the competition for the $1 coin was Wesley
Klassen of St. Catharines, Ont. (photo above).
Klassen
had two inspirations for his design; A love of trains, and Sir John A.
Macdonald, Canada’s first Prime Minister and a father of confederation.
“The coin got me to thinking about how Macdonald created
the national railway,” he said of his design, which he called Connecting
Canada. “Then I added in scenes from my boyhood vacations.”
The
design shows two trains, and landmarks such as Vancouver’s Lion’s Gate Bridge,
a prairie grain elevator, the CN Tower, Quebec City’s Chateau Frontenac, and an
East Coast lighthouse.
Which is cool—but that’s not the only train-themed
coin the Mint has made over the past 30 or so years.
Also this year it made a three-coin series called Locomotives
Across Canada. It features an
4-4-0
steam locomotive, an RS 20 (I can’t tell if that’s true or not, but someone
reading this blog can confirm it); and an ES44AC.
Another coin, made in 2011, commemorates the creation of the Champlain and St. Lawrence Railway in 1836.
Another coin was
issued in 2014 to commemorate the 100th anniversary of the founding
of the Grand Trunk Railway.
In 1986 the Mint issues a coin to celebrate
the Steam Expo at the Vancouver World’s Fair.
In
2018-11 it issued a set to commemorate the creation of the CPR, featuring a D-10, a Royal Hudson, a Jubilee and a Selkirk.
It also commemorated the Countess of Dufferin, on display here in my hometown, the first locomotive in western Canada.
The building of the CPR received a coin in 2015.
The contributions of the railways to the winning of World War 1 was marked in 2015.