Home > Memorabilia > Corporate Memorabilia >

1700s Dutch East India Company Copper Coin - "New York Penny"
1700s Dutch East India Company Copper Coin - "New York Penny"
1700s Dutch East India Company Copper Coin - "New York Penny"
 
Alternative Views:


Our Price: $59.95
Sale Price: $49.95
Vintage Collection


Free Shipping
Product Code: VT257-3
Qty:

Description
 
This is an authentic copper Duit minted by the Dutch East India company in 1700s. A duit is small copper trading piece used like money created in the 17th and 18th centuries. They were used throughout the Netherlands until the early 1800s. When the Dutch purchased Manhattan Island in the 1600s, settlers brought these Duit's with them giving them the nickname "New York Pennies." The coins have the monogram VOC which is the symbol of the Dutch East India Company. The reverse has the Crowned Coat of Arms of Zeeland with a lion swimming.

The Dutch East India Company (Verenigde Oost-Indische Compagnie or VOC) was the world's first multinational company and the first to issued shares of stock. They were granted a trade monopoly by the Netherlands and had quasi-government powers including the ability to wage war, strike coins, negotiate treaties and even establish colonies. The VOC backed explorer Henry Hudson who claimed Manhattan for the Netherlands in 1609. They called it New Amsterdam. It was later renamed New York. Trading of VOC shares lead to the worlds first stock exchange. Original stock certificates from the Dutch East India Company have auctioned for over $1,000,000.

Dutch East India Company Copper Duit - Aka "New York Penny"
  • Copper
  • Approx 3/4"
  • Age: Dates will range from the 1740s to 1780s
  • Condition - VG