By Jay Turner - February 12, 2026
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Hawaii 1881 Pattern 5 Cents, PCGS MS62
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Long before it was a state in the union of the United States,
Hawaii was an independent kingdom. When Captain James
Cook visited the islands in 1778, he gave them the western
moniker of the Sandwich Islands, named after John Montagu,
4th Earl of Sandwich and the Lord of the Admiralty (the head
of the Royal Navy at the time). While locally the kingdom was
named Hawai’i, starting in 1810 with unification, the Sandwich
Islands was what Hawaii was called by westerners until the
reign of King Kamehameha I.
When Cook arrived in 1778, the kingdom was inhabited by
an estimated 300,000 to 800,000 native Hawaiians. However,
the island’s indigenous population was decimated by foreign
diseases; the 1878 census recorded only 44,088 native
Hawaiians. King Kalakaua was faced with the need to increase
populations for both labor and to save the declining population
from going extinct.
One of King Kalakaua’s dreams was to travel the world. Given
the need for immigration and to bring world attention to his
kingdom, he set off on a world tour in 1881 and became the
first monarch to circumnavigate the globe. It was during this
world trip when King Kalakaua is believed to have met with
an owner of a nickel mine in New Caledonia, a French island
colony in the Pacific. The mine began sourcing nickel in 1875
and by the 1880s was a major export for the island. King
Kalakaua was offered a coinage contract for his kingdom, with
New Caledonian nickel being used for the coinage.
The patterns for this proposed coinage were struck at the Paris
Mint, with pieces featuring the king’s portrait and inscriptions
“KALAKAUA KING OF SANDWICH ISLANDS” as well
as an 1881 date on the obverse. The reverse features the
Hawaii crown mounted atop a garter incorporating a “5.” The
text “AU MAU KE EA O KA AINA I KA PONO” is on the
garter and contains a spelling error, with “AU” instead of the
correct “UA.” On the edges of some coins is the inscription
“MAILLECHORT,” referring to an alloy of copper, nickel,
and zinc that is sometimes called “German Silver.” About 200
examples of these patterns were produced and shipped to the
Kingdom of Hawaii following the king’s world tour. However,
the coinage was never adopted. Two years later in 1883, the
United States began producing circulating coinage for the
Kingdom of Hawaii.
One of these patterns, a rare 1881 Hawaii 5 Cent piece, was
submitted to PCGS during a recent grading event in Paris.
Many deceptive counterfeits were made by employing fake
dies across several metals. Meanwhile, genuine examples often
present conditional issues, as many pieces were used as pocket
pieces or incorporated into jewelry. Prior to encapsulation of
this example discussed here, PCGS had certified merely 20
specimens. The highlighted example was graded PCGS MS62
and boasts a PCGS Price Guide value of $29,500.
Article provided by PCGS at www.pcgs.com