Toonie
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Two dollars (Toonie) (Canada) | |
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Value: | 2.00 CAD |
Mass: | 7.3 g |
Diameter: | 28 mm |
Thickness: | 1.8 mm |
Edge: | Intermittent milled/smooth |
Composition: | outer ring 99% Ni |
Years of Minting: | 1996–present |
Catalog Number: | - |
Obverse | |
Design: | Elizabeth II, Queen of Canada |
Designer: | Susanna Blunt |
Design Date: | 2003 |
Reverse | |
Design: | Polar Bear in early summer on an ice floe |
Designer: | Brent Townsend |
Design Date: | 1996 |
Toonie (sometimes spelled twoonie or twonie) is the nickname Canadians collectively gave their two-dollar coin; it is a portmanteau word combining the number "two" with the name of the loonie, Canada's one-dollar coin. In Canadian French it is sometimes known as a polar, to rhyme with huard, for loonie.
Introduced on February 19, 1996, the toonie is a bi-metallic coin which bears an image of a polar bear, by Campbellford, Ontario artist Brent Townsend, on the reverse. The obverse, like all other current Canadian coins, has a portrait of Queen Elizabeth II. It is the only coin in Canada to have the "ELIZABETH II / D.G. REGINA" in a different typeface; it is also the only coin to consistently bear its issue date on the obverse.
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[edit] Naming
When the coin was introduced a number of nicknames were suggested. Some of the early ones included bearly, the deuce and the doubloonie (a play on "double loonie" and the former Spanish doubloon coin). A joke refers to the coin as "The Queen with the Bear Behind", and thus the moonie. Another joke poked fun at the then-weak Canadian dollar to American dollar exchange rate by suggesting that the coin be called "the American silver dollar"[citation needed]. Finally, the coin has been referred to as the Bouchard[citation needed] (after Quebec separatist leader Lucien Bouchard), due to a few reports of the inside disc of the coin separating from the outside in early coins.
Another angle to the name pairs the word "toonie" up with the "loonie" (one dollar coin) to complete the reference to "loonie toonie" or the famous and popular Looney Tunes cartoons; an indirect jibe at Canadian politicians who introduced the coins replacing the paper currency equivalents.
The name "toonie" became so widely accepted that in 2006 the Royal Canadian Mint secured the rights to it. A competition to name the bear resulted in the name "Churchill", a reference to the common polar bear spottings in Churchill, Manitoba.
[edit] Commemorative Editions
Year | Theme | Artist | Mintage | Special Notes |
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1999 | The founding of Nunavut | G. Arnaktavyok | 25,130,000 | Commemorating the founding of Nunavut, featuring an Inuit drummer |
2000 | Knowledge/Le Savoir | Tony Bianco | 29,880,000 | Millennium edition, the coin value "2 DOLLARS" appears on the obverse instead of on the reverse. |
2006 | 10th Anniversary | Tony Bianco | N/A | Featuring an updated polar bear image with a rising sun behind the bear. The first circulation coin to be introduced with the new 'mintmark'. [1] |
[edit] First strikes
Year | Theme | Mintage | Issue Price |
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2005 | Polar Bear | 2,375 | $14.95 |
2006 | 10th Anniversary Toonie | 5,000 | $15.95 |
2006 | New Mint Mark | 5,000 | $29.95 |
[edit] Trivia
- Many toonies in the first shipment of the coins were considered defective, because they could separate if struck hard or frozen, as the centre piece would shrink more than the outside. This problem quickly garnered media attention and eventually was believed to have been corrected, and the initial wave of so-called toonie popping blew over a few months after the coin's introduction. Although the public appears to believe the toonies were "corrected," the coins can still be separated if struck hard or frozen. Such a "separated coin" may still be redeemed at a bank for its face value; however, Canada's Currency Act explicitly prohibits the deliberate "break up" of "any coin"[2].
[edit] See also
Canadian banknotes and coins | |
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Topics of Canadian numismatics | Royal Canadian Mint · Royal Canadian Mint numismatic coins · Royal Canadian Mint Olympic coins · Royal Canadian Mint RCMP coins · Gold Maple Leaf · Silver Maple Leaf |
Canadian coinage | 1¢ (penny) · 5¢ (nickel) · 10¢ (dime) · 25¢ (quarter) · 50¢ · $1 (loonie) · $2 (toonie) · Canadian silver dollar |
Canadian banknotes | $5 · $10 · $20 · $50 · $100 · Withdrawn banknotes |
Historical currencies of Canada | New France livre · Canadian pound · Nova Scotian dollar · New Brunswick dollar · Early Canadian banking system |
Newfoundland dollar | 1¢ · 5¢ · 10¢ · 20¢ · 25¢ · 50¢ · Coins of the Newfoundland dollar |
Other | Bank of Canada · Calgary dollar · Canadian Bank Note Company · Canadian dollar · Canadian Numismatic Association · Canadian Numismatic Association medals and awards · History of Canadian currency · List of foreign countries with coinage struck at the Royal Canadian Mint · Ottawa Mint sovereigns ·Toronto dollar · Voyageur dollar |