Toonie turns 20 years old
In 1996, Jean Chretien was PM, the Macarena dominated dance floors and the $2 coin was born
Hard to believe, but it's been 20 years since Canada's $2 bill was permanently retired and the metallic coin known as the toonie was born.
The two-toned coin, featuring a polar bear on one side and a portrait of Queen Elizabeth on the other, went into circulation on Feb. 19, 1996. Leading up to its launch, there was much debate over what the new $2 coin should be called. The "bearie," the "toonie" (or "twonie") and the "double loonie" were among the contenders.
According to the Royal Canadian Mint, 375 million toonies were produced that first year.
Having trouble recalling what you were doing during the year of the toonie? Perhaps a few 1996 flashbacks will jog your memory.
Jean Chrétien, who was then prime minister, took down a protester who confronted him at National Flag of Canada Day in Hull, Que., on Feb. 15 that year.
If you went to any dances, weddings or just listened to pop music in 1996, you likely couldn't escape the Macarena. The Bayside Boys mix of the Spanish music duo Los del Rio's dance hit spent 14 weeks from August to November in the number 1 spot on the Billboard charts.
The internet was gaining traction. In February 1996, AT&T was promoting its dial-up Worldnet service.
It had also been almost 10 years since the paper Canadian dollar made the transition to coin. The loonie began circulating in 1987.
The more durable coins were meant to replace $1 and $2 bills as a cost-savings measure. According to the mint, each toonie is expected to last more than 30 years.
Over the last two decades, the mint has issued special versions of the toonie to commemorate significant events in Canada, including the founding of Nunavut in 1999, the 400th anniversary of Quebec City in 2008, the 200th anniversary of the War of 1812 in 2012 and the 100th anniversary of Canadian John McRae's First World War poem In Flanders Fields in 2015.
The toonie continues to change. Originally, its core was made of aluminum and bronze and the coin's outer ring was made of nickel. According to the mint's website, the March 2010 federal budget set a mandate to change its metallic composition because of the fluctuation in nickel and copper prices. The new coins are manufactured with multi-ply, nickel-plate steel for the outer ring and multi-ply, brass-plated aluminum bronze for the insert.
With files from Reuters, The Canadian Press and YouTube