*** Welcome to piglix ***

Australian pounds

Australian pound
AUS-4d-Commonwealth of Australia-One Pound (1918).jpg
Australian 1951 sixpence.jpg
One pound 6 pence
Denominations
Subunit
 ​120 shilling
 ​1240 penny
Plural  
penny pence
Symbol £
shilling s
penny d
Banknotes
 Freq. used 10s, £1, £5, £10
 Rarely used £20, £50, £100, £1000
Coins 12d, 1d, 3d, 6d, 1s, 2s
Demographics
User(s) Australia
Issuance
Central bank Reserve Bank of Australia
Valuation
Pegged with British pound at par, and then A£1 = GB 16s (£0.8)
Pegged by New Guinea pound at par
This infobox shows the latest status before this currency was rendered obsolete.

The pound (symbol £, or when distinguished from other currencies called the pound) was the currency of Australia from 1910 until 14 February 1966, when it was replaced by the Australian dollar. It was subdivided into 20 shillings (symbol s), each of 12 pence (symbol d).

The first European settlement of Australia took place on 26 January 1788 at Port Jackson (modern Sydney, New South Wales). The colony of New South Wales barely survived its first years and was largely neglected for much of the following quarter-century while the British government was preoccupied until 1815 with the Napoleonic Wars. One very important British oversight during this period was the provision of adequate coinage for the new colony and, because of the shortage of any sort of money, the real means of exchange during the first 25 years of settlement was rum, the access to which was controlled by the officers of the New South Wales Corps, who benefited most from access to land and imported goods.

Though it did not solve the problem arising from the lack of coins, but in an attempt to put some order into the economy, in 1800, Governor Philip Gidley King issued a proclamation setting the value of a variety of foreign coins in the colony. During this period, to protect the lucrative access to the imported rum, as well as other grievances, the officers, who came to be known as the "Rum Corps", deposed the governor in a standoff in 1808, referred to as the "Rum Rebellion". The New South Wales Corps was recalled soon after. Otherwise, the shortage of coinage persisted.

The first coinage issued by the colony took place in 1813, and was effected by punching the middle out of Spanish dollars. This process created two parts: a small coin, which was called the dump, and a ring, which was called a holey dollar. One holey dollar was worth five shillings (a quarter of one pound sterling), and one dump was worth one shilling and three pence (or one quarter of a holey dollar). This was done in order to keep the coins in New South Wales, as they would be valueless elsewhere. From 1817, when the first bank, the Bank of New South Wales, was established, private banks issued paper money denominated in pounds. Acceptance of private bank notes was not made compulsory by legal tender laws but they were widely used and accepted.


...
Wikipedia

...