The crisis of 1943

In 1943, during the Second World War, Mexico was again faced with a silver crisis (There was a combination of reasons: anticipation of a rise in the price of silver; the Mexican government’s agreement to sell practically its entire silver production to the United States for its military industry; and a boom in the Mexican and US jewellery industries). On 21 August it imposed a heavy export tax on silver products, to make it unprofitable to melt down silver coins to ship as bullion, and temporarily suspended a contract which promised all surplus silver production to the United States. However because of a shortage of fractional coinage, especially the fifty centavos denomination, it was compelled to authorise banks to issue cheques with printed denominations of twenty-five and fifty centavos. All these issues were quickly withdrawn.

Cámara Nacional de Comercio

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50c         includes numbers 7520 to 34767

 

A 50c cheque drawn on the Banco del Centro, S. A., dated 3 September, signed by Antonio Díaz Infante Ortuño, the tesorero, and Manuel Gómez Azcárate, the presidente of the Cámara..

Antonio Díaz Infante Ortuño 

sig Camara 1

Manuel Gómez Azcárate was born on 25 December 1898 in Doctor Arroyo, Nuevo León.

He died on 26 October 1976 in San Luis Potosí.

sig Camara 2

 

Cámara Nacional de Comercio en Pequeño

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number
total
value
 
50c         includes numbers 15920 to 34767

 

A variant drawn by the Cámara Nacional de Comercio en Pequeño de San Luis Potosí and signed by Edmundo Durán and L. Bedrosa.

Edmundo Durán sig Pequeno 1
L. Bedrosa sig Pequeno 2