Journal Pioneer

Cabinet OKs plan for Mint to craft special toonies

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The Royal Canadian Mint is creating two commemorat­ive coins to mark the 75th anniversar­y of D-Day.

The Liberal cabinet approved the design of the new toonies, one of which will have multiple colours instead of the usual twotoned coin, to commemorat­e a key turning point in the Second World War.

On June 6, 1944 a combined force of about 150,000 Allied troops, made up of largely of Canadian, American and British soldiers, stormed the beaches on France’s Normandy coast, coming up against Nazi troops in concrete fortified gun positions. About 14,000 Canadians were involved in the assault, known as Operation Overlord. Canada also contribute­d some 110 ships and 15 fighter and bomber squadrons. On D-Day, 359 Canadians died as they ran from boats onto Juno Beach and more than 1,000 were injured.

The invasion marked the start of months of fighting to free France from Nazi occupation and would eventually lead to victory in Europe.

The Mint regularly creates commemorat­ive coins to mark these kinds of anniversar­ies, having done so earlier this year with three million limited-edition toonies to mark the 100th anniversar­y of the armistice that ended the First World War in 1918.

And in 2014, for the 70th anniversar­y of D-Day, the Mint created a commemorat­ive silver coin depicting soldiers in full battle gear disembarki­ng a landing craft towards Juno Beach. But the Mint only created 8,400 of the coins, for collectors. The new toonies are to be “circulatio­n” coins, used as regular money.

Alex Reeves, a spokesman for the Mint, said the Crown corporatio­n couldn’t discuss the new coins because it doesn’t disclose informatio­n beyond what is published in official notices prior to the launch of a new commemorat­ive coin.

The government order says the D-Day toonies will have an image of four soldiers and one sailor, all wearing helmets and one holding a rifle, in a landing craft at Juno Beach.

The helmet of the middle soldier will be olive green on the coloured toonie.

There will also be renderings of a Canadian destroyer, barrage balloon and Spitfire fighter planes. The terms “D-Day” and “Remember,” along with the French “Le Jour J” and “Souvenir” will be inscribed around the coins.

Separately, the Liberals have also approved a commemorat­ive loonie to mark the 50th anniversar­y of Parliament’s decriminal­izing homosexual acts.

Up until 1969, sexual acts between consenting same-sex adults were deemed crimes in Canada and punishable by jail time.

 ?? CP PHOTO ?? The Royal Canadian Mint is being given the green light to create two commemorat­ive coins next year to mark the 75th anniversar­y of D-Day.
CP PHOTO The Royal Canadian Mint is being given the green light to create two commemorat­ive coins next year to mark the 75th anniversar­y of D-Day.

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