20 British Pound Imperial Chinese Government dated 1911 Hukuang Railway Gold Bon

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Seller: labarre_galleries ✉️ (2,223) 100%, Location: Portsmouth, New Hampshire, US, Ships to: WORLDWIDE & many other countries, Item: 186297086600 20 British Pound Imperial Chinese Government dated 1911 Hukuang Railway Gold Bon. FB5100B. 20 5% Bond, Green, Uncanceled, many coupons remain. Imperial Chinese Government Hukuang Railways bonds are well-nigh ubiquitous in the marketplace. They were issued in 1911 by a consortium of banks in London, Berlin, Paris and New York, with serial numbers running into the six digits, of which hundreds if not thousands appear to have survived. A few bear New York State adhesive revenue stamps; shown here is a New York issue 100 bond with Secured Debt $1 and Investments $1 stamps paying New Yorks Investments tax in 1917 and 1918; this secured for the bondholder exemption from that states onerous personal property tax. Coupon bonds of this era are generally large and spectacular"American bonds typically measure about 10 by 15 inches"but this one sets new standards on both scores. It is huge, some 16 by 22 inches as shown. Its design and execution by security printers Waterlow & Sons of London are equally impressive, featuring the facsimile seals and signatures of Chinas Minister of Posts and Communications and its Minister in Washington. Alongside is the countersignature of a representative of the New York banks J. P. Morgan & Co., Kuhn Loeb & Co., the First National Bank of the City of New York, and the National City Bank of New York. Beauty is in the eye of the beholder, and to my eye these Hukuang Railways bonds are among the most attractive pieces ever to bear stamps. Similar bonds issued in London, Berlin and Paris by the Hong Kong and Shanghai Banking Corporation, Deutsch-Asiatische Bank, and Banque de LIndo-Chine, respectively, show the signatures of their representatives and of the Chinese Ministers to Great Britain, Germany and France. Only the relatively few stamped bonds are philatelically interesting, but all are historically important. Surprising Historical Significance There is strong evidence that the controversial financing of the Hukuang Railway was the tipping point that sparked Chinas revolution of 1911, which overthrew three millennia of dynastic rule and led to formation of the Chinese Republic the following year. No less qualified an observer than Sir John Newell Jordan, British Minister to Peking from 1906 until 1920, wrote with the benefit of hindsight at the end of his tenure that the Hukuang Railway Agreement ... was the proximate cause of the downfall of the Dynasty. (Woodhouse, 2004). The reader can be excused for finding it improbable that the terms of a railroad loan could trigger a revolution. The explanation is a tale worth telling. Invasion via Funding By 1911, nationalists had long protested the extent of foreign control of Chinas railroads. As summarized by Goetzmann and Ukhov (2005), By most accounts the competition among the great powers to secure railway concessions during this period through a combination of political diplomacy and the financial might of their capital markets was, in some ways, the high point of the age of Imperialism. At least it was characterized as such by contemporary commentators such as Lenin, who used the division of China into spheres of influence by foreign capitalists as the example of Capitalist Imperial Item ordered may not be exact piece shown. All original and authentic.
  • Condition: Used
  • Condition: F - V.F.

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