The Standard (St. Catharines)

Dig unearths what could be Canada’s oldest English coin

Currency has portrait of King Henry VII

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CUPIDS, N.L. — An archeologi­cal fieldworke­r excavating a site in eastern Newfoundla­nd has unearthed what could be the oldest English coin ever found in Canada.

William Gilbert, head archeologi­st and supervisor at the Cupids Cove Plantation Provincial Historic Site, says one of his colleagues found the silver coin in September, adding that research has confirmed it was minted sometime between 1493 and 1499.

“It’s important because it sparks your imaginatio­n,” Gilbert said in an interview Wednesday. The coin, he added, is more than a century older than Cupids, founded in 1610. “You just have to wonder when you look at this thing: how many hands did it pass through?”

Known as a Henry VII “half groat,” or twopenny piece, the nickel-sized coin was minted in Canterbury, England, more than 500 years ago. Gilbert said he came to that conclusion after consulting Paul Berry, former curator of the Bank of Canada’s Currency Museum.

The coin features a stylized portrait of King Henry VII and a Latin inscriptio­n that says, “Henry, by the grace of God, King of England and France.” The other side features a cross and the king’s motto, also in Latin: “I have made God my helper.”

The coin was found under 20 centimetre­s of soil near the northeast corner of the excavation, just beyond the remains of what was once a wooden palisade.

“You can picture kind of a Wild West fort arrangemen­t,” said Gilbert.

Settled by Bristol, England, merchant John Guy, The Cupids plantation is the site of the oldest English settlement in Canada. The English colony at Jamestown, Va., was settled in 1607.

 ?? THE CANADIAN PRESS ?? The nickel-sized coin was minted in Canterbury, England, more than 500 years ago.
THE CANADIAN PRESS The nickel-sized coin was minted in Canterbury, England, more than 500 years ago.

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