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Auto Dollar

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Auto Dollar
ValueOne yuan (壹圆/壹圓)
Mass25.80 g
Diameter39 mm
ShapeRound
CompositionSilver
Years of mintingROC 17 (1928)
Mintage648,000
Obverse
DesignZhou Xicheng's car driving on a road, with grass along the front arranged to spell his personal name
Reverse
DesignChinese text surrounding a central flower motif
Auto Dollar
Traditional Chinese貴州汽車幣
Simplified Chinese贵州汽车币
Literal meaningGuizhou automobile coin
Transcriptions
Standard Mandarin
Hanyu PinyinGuìzhōu qìchē bì
Wade–GilesKuei4-chou1 Chʻi4-chʻe1 Pi4
Yue: Cantonese
Yale Romanizationgwai jāu hei chē baih
Alternative Chinese name
Traditional Chinese汽車錢
Simplified Chinese汽车钱
Literal meaningAutomobile money
Transcriptions
Standard Mandarin
Hanyu PinyinQìchē qián
Wade–GilesChʻi4-chʻe1 Chʻien2
Yue: Cantonese
Yale Romanizationhei chē chín

The Auto Dollar (simplified Chinese: 贵州汽车币; traditional Chinese: 貴州汽車幣; pinyin: Guìzhōu qìchē bì; lit. 'Guizhou automobile coin', also known as the Motorcar Dollar or Kweichow Auto Dollar) is a silver one yuan coin minted by Chinese warlord Zhou Xicheng [zh] in 1928 to commemorate the construction of roadways in Guizhou province. The obverse of the coin features an automobile driving along a road, flanked by grass arranged to spell out Zhou's personal name, Xicheng (西成; Xīchéng).

Zhou rose to power in the mid-1920s. He subsequently acquired the rural province's first known automobile, and oversaw the construction of roadways across the region. Although some sources described Zhou's automobile as a soft-topped model from the Hudson Motor Car Company, the vehicle featured on the coin does not appear to closely correspond to any specific make or model. 648,000 coins of the type were produced at a small mint established by Zhou in Guiyang. The coin fell out of regular circulation in the early 1930s, partially due to demand from international coin collectors. The Auto Dollar is a rare and heavily counterfeited type; a certified example graded in mint condition sold for US$336,000 at a 2023 auction.

Background

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Prior to the late 19th century, silver coinage in China was largely limited to imported foreign coins, used alongside copper cash coins and the sycee silver ingot currency. Large-scale domestic production of silver coins began around 1890 in Guangdong in order to compete with foreign silver. By 1910, provincial silver mints had emerged in around half of the Chinese provinces. The introduction of centrally produced silver coinage by the Qing government was delayed due to the uncertain primacy of the tael or dollar (; yuán) as a base monetary standard. The central mint at Tianjin only produced limited quantities of Dragon dollars before the 1911 Revolution, and was destroyed the following year. Central coinage entered production again in 1915, but was stifled by the emergence of the Warlord Period. A unified national coinage system would not be achieved until 1932–1933, with the opening of the Shanghai Central Mint by the Nationalist government.[1][2]

A color photograph of a 1926 Hudson motorcar parked on grass at an antique car show.
A 1926 Hudson Super Six. Some sources describe Zhou Xicheng's vehicle as a Hudson model.

Displacing the Dragon dollar designs were coins featuring the busts of influential political and military leaders. Coins featuring depictions of Sun Yat-sen and Yuan Shikai were common in the early years of the Republic. Other figures were featured on various copper, silver, and gold coins, often intended as commemorative pieces, rather than circulating currency. Regional warlords such as Tang Jiyao, Lu Rongting, Duan Qirui, Cao Kun, and Zhang Zuolin commissioned coinage featuring themselves to commemorate their achievements and boost their political prestige during the political and military turmoil of the late 1910s and 1920s.[3]

Yuan Zuming [zh] served as the military governor of Guizhou province until his death at the hands of Nationalist forces in 1927 for an alleged lack of loyalty. Following this, his nominal lieutenant Zhou Xicheng [zh] assumed full control of the province. Zhou, already a prominent civil governor and warlord, aligned closely with the Nationalist government and invested heavily in Guizhou's civil infrastructure.[4] He imported the province's first known automobile around 1926, described in the memoirs of engineering advisor Oliver Julian Todd as a "seven-seater American automobile".[5] Some sources describe this car as a "soft-top" model produced by the Hudson Motor Car Company.[6] In addition to large scale road construction across the province, Zhou sponsored various infrastructure and construction projects in Guiyang. Among these included the construction of an arsenal and a small mint in the city.[7]

Design and history

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A black and white photo of Zhou Xicheng, wearing a suit
Zhou Xicheng, c. 1920s

No mints existed in Guizhou during the early 1920s, and it relied on coinage produced in other provinces. In 1926, a provisional mint was established in southern Guizhou, using machinery and coin dies taken from the Chengdu mint [zh].[8] In large part due to the machinery and technicians provided by the local arsenal, the Guiyang mint was able to produce coinage by 1928.[7] Unlike many other regional warlords in China, Zhou never commissioned coinage featuring his image. This may have been due to a desire to avoid association with other warlords and emphasize his loyalty to the Nationalist government.[7]

Although serving to recognize Zhou's reputation for road construction more generally, the coin is thought to memorialize the 1928 completion of a provincial highway in Guizhou. It was only minted that year. The obverse features an automobile driving along a road, with grass in the foreground arranged to spell out Xicheng (西成; Xīchéng), his personal name, when the coin is tilted 90 degrees.[9][10][11] Although it was intended as a representation of Zhou's car, the vehicle featured on the coin does not perfectly match its description; it is depicted with a hard-topped roof and a design that does not match any specific make or model.[9][12] The car and grass design is surrounded by a pearled ring. Surrounding this is text naming the Guizhou government as the issuer, as well as the coin's silver weight—seven mace and two candareens.[13]

The reverse features Chinese text surrounding a central rosette seal associated with Sichuan's republic coinage. Surrounding the central seal are four characters reading "Guizhou Silver Coin" (Chinese: 貴州銀幣; pinyin: Guìzhōu yínbì). A knotted circle surrounds the central characters, above which is given the Chinese Republican calendar date, 17 (1928 AD). At the bottom, the denomination (Chinese: 壹圓; pinyin: Yī yuán; lit. 'One Yuan' is given. Two small rosaces are found along the sides of both the obverse and reverse. Struck in silver, the coin has a weight of 25.8 g (0.9 oz) and a diameter of 39 mm (1.5 in). 648,000 pieces were issued.[14][13]

Some varieties exist of the coin, differing through minor distinctions in the rendering of the car, grass, and text. The lines along the car's hood are usually curving towards the top, but remaining straight in some varieties. Two blades of grass are visible along the curb in the bottom-right corner in most varieties, but three are visible in one variety. Another variety depicts additional spokes on the car's wheels.[13]

Legacy and collecting

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The coin became popular with collectors soon after its release. By the early 1930s, the coin had become increasingly scarce in circulation due to demand from international collectors.[10] One of the coins, graded AU 53 by the Numismatic Guaranty Company auctioned for US$192,000 in January 2022.[15] In June 2023, this record was broken by an MS 62-graded example, the second-highest grade of any known Auto Dollar. This coin auctioned for US$336,000 at the Hong Kong International Numismatic Fair.[16]

Due to the coin's rarity, they are commonly counterfeited. Counterfeit examples are typically of higher quality and consistency, due to the endemic die flaws and poor metal quality within the original issue.[17][15]

References

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Citations

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  1. ^ Wright 1992, pp. 97–98.
  2. ^ Wright 1978, pp. 148–149.
  3. ^ Bevan 2019, pp. 346–347.
  4. ^ Bevan 2019, pp. 347–350.
  5. ^ Bevan 2019, p. 352.
  6. ^ Wright 1978, p. 159.
  7. ^ a b c Bevan 2019, pp. 354–355.
  8. ^ Wright 1978, pp. 168–170.
  9. ^ a b Bevan 2019, pp. 345–346.
  10. ^ a b China Weekly Review 1933, pp. 450–451.
  11. ^ Hernandez, Jaime (August 12, 2013). "A Warlord Produces the China 1928 Auto Dollar". Professional Coin Grading Service. Retrieved May 31, 2024.
  12. ^ Wright 1978, pp. 169–170.
  13. ^ a b c Kann 1954, pp. 261–263.
  14. ^ Thomas & Schmidt 2017, p. 434.
  15. ^ a b "NGC-certified Chinese "Auto Dollar" Realizes $192,000 in January Sale". Numismatic Guaranty Company. February 7, 2022. Retrieved May 31, 2024.
  16. ^ "'Long-Whiskered Dragon' Dollar Flies to $690,000, Bringing the Heat to $9.7 Million HKINF World Coins Platinum Event". Numismatic News. June 26, 2023.
  17. ^ "Year 17 (1928) Kweichow L&M-609 Dollar". Numismatic Guaranty Company. Retrieved May 31, 2024.

Bibliography

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