Let me share with you some interesting facts about stamps and currency. Did you know that Hong Kong issued its first set of stamps as early as 1862? That was even one year before our first legal tender coin, the 'one mil', was issued and minted!
And did you know what types of currencies were used in Hong Kong for its daily business before 1863? The answer is a wide array of coins, including Chinese silver ingots and bronze cash coins, British shillings and gold pounds, Spanish silver dollars, Mexican dollars and Indian rupees.
In 1863 the Hong Kong Government commissioned the Royal Mint in England to produce the 'one mil' coin. This coin followed the hollow-centred design of traditional Chinese bronze coins, highlighting the cosmological concept of a dome-like firmament covering the square earth.
And did you know what you could buy with a one mil coin at that time? With the denominations of coins ranging from one dollar down to one mil, which is a thousandth of a dollar, one mil would be roughly sufficient to buy a bowl of congee and a deep-fried dough.
'Not worth a mil'
It is not known whether there is any link between the one mil coin and the Chinese expression of 'not worth a mil' when referring to something absolutely insignificant. However nowadays the one mil coin has become a highly treasured collectible worth hundreds of thousands of times more than it originally did. It is thus most befitting that it is chosen as one of the major designs in the set of stamps that Hongkong Post is issuing today.
Some of our media friends may recall that this coin also featured in the front cover of the March, 2003, issue of the HKMA Quarterly Bulletin.
Another coin that will feature in the stamp set is Hong Kong's first 20-cent silver coin. Minted in 1866, it was also the first coin produced by the Hong Kong Mint. And not many people would know that the mint was actually located in Cleveland Street, Causeway Bay.
When you go there now, you can still find a red plaque marking the mint's former location. Unfortunately the mint operated for only two years after its start-up in 1866, and was later rebuilt as a sugar factory.
1935 dollar could buy 30 catties of rice
The third 'coin' I'd like to introduce to you is the first currency note issued by the Hong Kong Government - the one dollar note which was put into circulation in 1935. Based on the purchasing power at that time, a one dollar note would buy 30 catties of rice! Judging from the fact that most people could earn only a few dollars each month, this note was really a big sum.
The last coin design in the stamp set was the 1997 Commemorative Gold Coin issued by the HKMA on behalf of the Government to mark the establishment of the Hong Kong Special Administrative Region on July 1, 1997.
This legal tender coin has a face value of $1,000. It bears the standard Bauhinia design on the obverse side and a special commemorative design of the Hong Kong skyline on the reverse side, highlighting our status as an international financial centre.
Bauhinia coins usher in reunification
Another philatelic product to be introduced in line with the stamp set is a Stamp Sheetlet featuring the Bauhinia coins, the design of which I, luckily, was able to get involved in.
I hope these interesting tidbits about the coinage of Hong Kong may help increase your interest in our currency as well as the special set of stamps to be issued today.