LOONIE


'Loonie' is the name Canadians gave the gold-coloured, bronze-plated, one-dollar coin shortly after its introduction. It bears images of a common loon, a well-known Canadian bird, on the reverse, and of Queen Elizabeth II on the obverse.
The design for the coin was meant to be a voyageur theme, similar to the country's previous one dollar/silver dollar coin, but the reverse dies were lost by Canada Post while in transit to the Royal Canadian Mint in Winnipeg. In order to avoid possible counterfeiting, a different design was used [1]. The coin was released to the public on 30 June 1987, and circulation of the one-dollar banknote was intentionally reduced at the same time to forestall any reluctance by the public to accept the new coin. As a result, the introduction of the coin was successful in achieving public acceptance in a fairly smooth fashion.
The coin has become the symbol of its currency. Newspapers will often discuss the rate at which the ''loonie'' is trading against the United States dollar. The nickname ''loonie'' (''huard'' in French), initially a slang term for the Canadian dollar, became so widely recognized that in 2006 the Royal Canadian Mint secured the rights to the name "Loonie".
The loon portrait is slightly inaccurate. The loon's body is sitting too high on the water, much like a Mallard duck's body.
The coin is made of Aureate, a bronze-electroplated nickel combination. The total composition of the coin is 91.5% nickel and 8.5% bronze. The bronze is about 88% copper and 12% tin.

Contents
Commemorative editions
Specimen Set Variant Dollars
First Strikes
The lucky loonie
Trivia
References
External links

Commemorative editions


The design has been changed several times for commemorative editions:
YearThemeArtistMintageSpecial Notes
1992125th Anniversary of the Confederation [1]Rita Swanson23,010,000showing children and the Parliament Building. The regular ''loon'' design was also minted that year bearing the double date "1867-1992".
1994Remembrance Design [2]RCM Staff15,000,000image of National War Memorial in Ottawa
1995Peacekeeping Monument [2]J.K. Harman, R.G. Enriquez, C.H. Oberlander, Susan Taylor41,813,100 (see note)Included in 1995 Loon Mintage
2004Lucky Loonie [4]R.R. Carmichael6,526,000A Sterling Silver Edition was produced
2005Terry FoxStan Witten12,909,000 [5]Fox is the first Canadian citizen to be featured on a Canadian coin. There are versions that exist without grass on the reverse of the coin. [4]
2006Lucky LoonieJean-Luc Grondin2,145,000 [5]This is the second Lucky Loonie.
2008Lucky LoonieN/AN/AThis will be the third Lucky Loonie.
2010Lucky LoonieN/AN/AThis will be the fourth Lucky Loonie.

The 2005 Terry Fox dollar

Specimen Set Variant Dollars


YearThemeArtistMintageIssue Price
200215th Anniversary Loonie [8]Dora de Pédery-Hunt67,672$39.95
2004Jack Miner Bird Sanctuary [9]Susan Taylor46,493$39.95
2005Tufted Puffin [10]N/A40,000$39.95
2006Snowy Owl [11]Glen Loates40,000$39.95
2007Trumpeter SwanKerri Burnett40,00045.95

First Strikes


YearThemeMintageIssue Price
2005Common Loon1,944$14.95
2005Terry Fox [4]19,949$14.95
2006Lucky Loonie20,010$15.95
2006With New Mint Mark5,000$29.95

The lucky loonie


In recent years, the golden-coloured loonie became associated with Canada's winning hockey and curling teams and has been viewed as a good-luck charm in international competition. The legend began during the 2002 Winter Olympics, when a Canadian icemaker for the ice surfaces in the ice hockey tournament, Trent Evans, had buried a loonie under centre ice. [13] The original reason for placing the loon was to assist in the puck-drop: the centre ice at Salt Lake was emblazoned with a large logo, and was missing the customary circle used by the referee and face-off players as a target for the puck - so he needed to add a some kind of a dot as a puck target that would not stand out, and a loon buried under the ice served well. Both the men's and women's hockey teams would win gold in the tournament, the men's 50 years to the day after their last gold medal victory. Following the Games, Team Canada executive director Wayne Gretzky recovered the coin and gave it to the Hockey Hall of Fame.
A loonie was also used at the IIHF World Hockey Championships between Canada and Sweden on May 11, 2003. This lucky loonie is known affectionately as the Helsinki Loonie. It was hidden surreptitiously before the Gold-Medal hockey game and helped Team Canada to victory. After forward Anson Carter scored against Swedish goaltender Mikael Tellqvist in overtime to win the World Hockey Championship for Canada, Team Canada officials admitted they had placed a Loonie in the padding beneath the crossbar of the Swedish net. [14]
The legend is also prevalent in curling, as the Kevin Martin rink at the same Olympics had won silver medals on a sheet with silver-coloured quarters underneath the surface. At the 2006 Winter Olympics, the Canadian icemakers in the curling tournament buried two loonies, one at each end of the sheet — coincidentally, Brad Gushue would win the gold medal there. In the same Olympics, the icemakers at the hockey tournament announced that they would not bury a loonie under the ice. The men's team finished out of the medals while the women's team won gold.
This legend is kept alive by the Royal Canadian Mint, which has since issued specially-designed "Lucky Loonies" for each year the summer and winter Olympics Games are held. Two new Olympic-themed loonies are due to be released in commemoration of the 2010 Winter Olympics being held in Vancouver-Whistler.

Trivia



★ When the new coin portrait of Queen Elizabeth II was first issued in 1990, a legend surfaced that the artist had simply added the image of the so-called "King's crown" to a portrait of the Queen, and that she was never meant to be seen wearing that headgear. This is patently false; she posed personally for the portrait wearing one of her usual crowns.

★ An episode of '' ("Blaze of Glory") also made mention of a lucky loonie, although the episode's air date (12 May 1997) predates the more-recent Olympic tradition, making the two unrelated. The character, Michael Eddington, had a family heirloom in the form of a 22nd century Canadian one dollar coin that he called his "lucky loonie".

★ The town of Echo Bay, Ontario, home of loonie designer Robert-Ralph Carmichael, has erected an enormous loonie in honour of Mr. Carmichael along the highway.

★ The coin is actually a regular hendecagon (an 11-sided polygon).

★ On the Canadian version of ''Deal or No Deal'', the loonie has replaced the $1USD case ("Toonie" is also present as the next highest case).

Robin Williams referenced the Loonie during his 2002 Live On Broadway special, taking a jab at its peculiar name. He said, "Canadian money is also called "the Looney"; how can you take an economic crisis seriously?"

References



1. Charlton Standard Catalogue of Canadian Coins, 60th Anniversary Edition, p. 174
2. Charlton Standard Catalogue of Canadian Coins, 60th Anniversary Edition, p. 175
3. Charlton Standard Catalogue of Canadian Coins, 60th Anniversary Edition, p. 175
4. Charlton Standard Catalogue of Canadian Coins, 60th Anniversary Edition, p. 177
5. 2006 Royal Canadian Mint Annual Report, p. 46
6. Charlton Standard Catalogue of Canadian Coins, 60th Anniversary Edition, p. 177
7. 2006 Royal Canadian Mint Annual Report, p. 46
8. Charlton Standard Catalogue of Canadian Coins, 60th Anniversary Edition, p. 315
9. Charlton Standard Catalogue of Canadian Coins, 62nd Edition, p. 236
10. Charlton Standard Catalogue of Canadian Coins, 62nd Edition, p. 237
11. Charlton Standard Catalogue of Canadian Coins, 62nd Edition, p. 238
12. Charlton Standard Catalogue of Canadian Coins, 60th Anniversary Edition, p. 177
13. http://www.mint.ca/luckyloonie/default.htm
14. http://www.hhof.com/html/newsloon2.shtml


External links



The chemistry of the loonie

Snopes: A loon appears on Canada's one-dollar coin because the original dies, featuring a different design, were lost in transit.

Loonie at centre ice

The loonie's American trade secret revealed

Loonie 20 years old

This article provided by Wikipedia. To edit the contents of this article, click here for original source.

psst.. try this: add to faves