The South African Republic's postal orders were introduced on 1 January 1898, which was also the date that the South African Postal Union Convention came into effect.
The postal orders are inscribed in Dutch.
Issued postal orders do not have counterfoils attached, as the counterfoils were kept by the post office for recording purposes. Any postal orders with counterfoils still attached are from books souvenired after the post office was captured during the Second Boer War.
Denomination Chart
editCatalogue number | Denomination | Commissie | Colour |
---|---|---|---|
PS701 | 1 Shilling | 1 Penny | Black |
--- | 1 Shilling and Sixpence | 1 Penny | Bright Blue |
PS702 | 2 Shillings and Sixpence | 1 Penny | Bistre-brown |
PS703 | 5 Shillings | 1 Penny | Olive-green |
PS704 | 7 Shillings and Sixpence | 2 Pence | Yellow-orange |
PS705 | 10 Shillings | 2 Pence | Turquoise-blue |
PS706 | 12 Shillings and Sixpence | 3 Pence | Brown-red |
PS707 | 15 Shillings | 3 Pence | Deep blue |
PS708 | 17 Shillings and Sixpence | 3 Pence | Red-orange |
PS709 | 20 Shillings | 3 Pence | Reddish-purple |
Currency issues (1900)
editThe South African Republic was the first country, along with the Orange Free State, to declare postal orders to be legal tender as an emergency currency. All denominations, except the 1/6, were allowed to circulate. This was done to save on both paper and labour.
References
edit- Albert Pick (2002). Neil Shafer; George S. Cuhaj (eds.). Standard Catalog of World Paper Money. Volume 1. Specialized issues (9th ed.). KP Books. ISBN 0-87349-466-0.