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The Philippine fifty-centavo coin (Filipino: Limampung sentimo) (50¢) was a denomination of Philippine currency. It was minted for the Philippines from 1864 [ 1 ] to 1994 and was demonetized in 1998.
The 1 ⁄ 2 and 1 centavo coins were struck in bronze, the 5 centavo struck in copper (75%) - nickel (25%), the 10, 20, 50 centavo and peso coins were struck in a silver composition. From 1903 to 1906, the silver coins had a silver content of 90%, while those struck after 1906 had a reduced silver content of 75% for 10 through 50 centavos and ...
50 centavos: 1936 Foundation of the Commonwealth of the Philippines, with portraits of President Manuel Quezon and Governor General Frank Murphy: 20,000 27.5 mm 10.0 g 75% silver 1 peso: 1936 Foundation of the Commonwealth of the Philippines, with portraits of President Manuel Quezon and U.S. President Franklin D. Roosevelt: 10,000 35 mm 20.0 g ...
United States Administration 50 centavos silver coin minted in San Francisco in 1918. ten-centavo coin issued 1907–1945. After the United States took control of the Philippines, the United States Congress passed the Philippine Coinage Act of 1903, established the unit of currency to be a theoretical gold peso (not coined) consisting of 12.9 ...
When Philippine coinage production resumed in 1944, the One, Five, and Fifty Centavo pieces were again struck in San Francisco (complete with "S" mintmark), Five Centavo pieces were also struck in Philadelphia (no mintmark), and the Ten and Twenty Centavo pieces were struck in Denver, introducing the "D" mintmark to Philippine coinage.
5 centavos 108 mm × 55 mm Red Bank title, bank seal, value, serial number "PHILIPPINES", value April 15, 1951 June 30, 1958 January 5, 1970 10 centavos Maroon 20 centavos Green 50 centavos Blue 1 ⁄ 2 peso 130 mm × 60 mm Green Mt. Mayon and three men riding on a carabao-drawn cart July 1, 1958 February 28, 1969 Large denomination notes ₱1
50 centavo coin (1918) which features Figueroa's design (right) ... His surviving child, Blanca, was born while they were en route to the Philippines by ship in 1892 ...
In 1943 MacArthur requested and received the following counterfeited notes: five million 10-peso notes, three million 5-peso notes, one and a half million 1-peso notes and five hundred thousand 50-centavo notes. [8] The American forgeries are known to have the following block letter codes: 50-centavo bills: PA, PB, PE, PF, PG, PH and PI