2021 Defending Country Coloured $2 C Mintmark
From the Boer War and the trenches of the Western Front to Korea and Afghanistan, Indigenous Australians have proudly served in every conflict and commitment involving Australian defence contingents since Federation.
Once on the margins of Australia’s military history, the significance of the story of Indigenous Australian service is now being recognised.
Despite restrictions in the 1903 Defence Act preventing those “not substantially of European origin or descent” from enlisting, thousands of Indigenous Australians volunteered to serve the nation that denied them the rights they were fighting to defend. Once accepted for service, individuals often experienced a sense of friendship and equality that was absent from civilian life, with access to training, education, travel and equal pay.
While friendships endured long after the war, equality did not.
- Commemorating Indigenous Australia’s longstanding tradition of serving in the military
- Uncirculated version of the coloured circulating coin bears a ‘C’ Mintmark not included on the circulating edition
- Coin’s reverse based on the painting Indigenous Military Service by Kalkadoon artist Chern’ee Sutton
- Obverse features the effigy of Her Majesty Queen Elizabeth II
- sculpted by Jody Clark
- Encapsulated in presented card
- Australian legal tender
2021 Defending Country Coloured $2 C Mintmark
From the Boer War and the trenches of the Western Front to Korea and Afghanistan, Indigenous Australians have proudly served in every conflict and commitment involving Australian defence contingents since Federation.
Once on the margins of Australia’s military history, the significance of the story of Indigenous Australian service is now being recognised.
Despite restrictions in the 1903 Defence Act preventing those “not substantially of European origin or descent” from enlisting, thousands of Indigenous Australians volunteered to serve the nation that denied them the rights they were fighting to defend. Once accepted for service, individuals often experienced a sense of friendship and equality that was absent from civilian life, with access to training, education, travel and equal pay.
While friendships endured long after the war, equality did not.
- Commemorating Indigenous Australia’s longstanding tradition of serving in the military
- Uncirculated version of the coloured circulating coin bears a ‘C’ Mintmark not included on the circulating edition
- Coin’s reverse based on the painting Indigenous Military Service by Kalkadoon artist Chern’ee Sutton
- Obverse features the effigy of Her Majesty Queen Elizabeth II
- sculpted by Jody Clark
- Encapsulated in presented card
- Australian legal tender