200 Dollars (In the name of Elizabeth II; Passage for Gold) 2023 front 200 Dollars (In the name of Elizabeth II; Passage for Gold) 2023 back
200 Dollars (In the name of Elizabeth II; Passage for Gold) 2023 photo
© owatchman

200 Dollars In the name of Elizabeth II; Passage for Gold

2023 year
Gold (.99999) 31.16 g 30 mm
Description
Issuer
Canada
King
Charles III (2022-date)
Type
Non-circulating coin
Year
2023
Value
200 Dollars 200 CAD = USD 148
Currency
Dollar (1858-date)
Composition
Gold (.99999)
Weight
31.16 g
Diameter
30 mm
Shape
Round
Technique
Milled
Orientation
Medal alignment ↑↑
Updated
2024-10-04
References
Numista
N#370332
Rarity index
97%

Reverse

Three workers on left at a sluice with a train on right. Purity and weight below.

Script: Latin

Lettering:
CANADA
2023
99999
FINE GOLD 1 OZ OR PUR

Designer: Steve Hepburn

Edge

Serrated

Comment

As the Klondike Gold Rush (1896-1899) went on, continued prospecting and the influx of stampeders bound for the boomtown of Dawson City fueled a demand for transportation. Most made the treacherous journey by foot and boat, but in 1898, work began on a narrow-gauge railroad that would serve as a vital link to the coast—and to the rest of the world.

Completed in 1900, the White Pass & Yukon Route (WP&YR) Railway was a marvel of engineering that spanned 175 kilometres, from Skagway, Alaska, to Whitehorse, Yukon. It took a total workforce of 35,000 men to overcome some of the most challenging terrain and complete “The Scenic Railway of the World,” the steepest pitched railway in Canada.

As a freight, ore and passenger carrier, WP&YR drastically shortened the journey in and out of the Yukon’s interior and facilitated the flow of goods. Freight could be offloaded in Whitehorse then ferried down the Yukon River to Dawson City, while gold could be loaded onto barges and sent upriver to Whitehorse, where it was loaded onto WP&YR trains bound for the coast.

The WP&YR was reopened as a tourist attraction in 1988 and excursions continue to run on the lower portion of the original line. It is a lasting reminder of the Klondike Gold Rush era, when the feverish search for riches paved the way for the Yukon to join Confederation and made Canada one of the world’s leading gold producers; but the gold rush also irrevocably altered both the landscape and the lives of the Indigenous peoples who lived there. The legacy of the Klondike Gold Rush is complex, and the effects, both good and bad, are still being felt today.

Interesting fact

One interesting fact about this coin is that it has a unique rectangular shape, unlike most coins which are circular.