Mexico 1919-Mo 5 centavos
This specimen is a key date example of a type struck 1914-35 at Mexico City. The last branch mints, Zacatecas and Culiacan, were closed in 1905 and all official Mexican coinage since has borne the Mexico City mintmark ("M" or "Mo"). The previous nickel five centavos (struck 1905-14) were struck on blanks imported from Germany, a trade made impossible by the outbreak of World War One. The bronze five centavos was demonetized in 1936 and withdrawn in 1937. The 1931 five centavos, one of the major rarities of twentieth century Mexican numismatics, was apparently struck but never officially released. There are also similar bronze one, two, ten and twenty centavos.
Recorded mintage: 400,000.
Specification: 9 g, bronze (.950 Cu, .025 Sn, .025 Zn), 28 mm diameter, plain edge.
Catalog reference: KM 422.
- Harper, David C. [Ed.], North American Coins & Prices, 17th Ed., Iola, WI: Krause Publications, 2007.
- Buttrey, T. V., and Clyde Hubbard, A Guide Book of Mexican Coins, 1822 to date, 6th ed., Iola, WI: Krause Publications, 1992.
Link to:
- 1909 5 centavos
- 1918 5 centavos
- 1919 bronze 10 centavos
- 1919 silver 10 centavos
- 1919 20 centavos
- 1919 50 centavos, heavy
- 1919 50 centavos, light
- 1919 peso
- 1919 2 pesos
- 1919 2½ pesos
- 1919 10 pesos
- 1919 20 pesos
- 1920 5 centavos
- Coins and currency dated 1919
- return to Mexican coinage of the modern era, since 1905