

And so they made their own semi-mechanical Transvaal Money Boxes – making the pipe thicker and movable. Other manufacturers saw the original Harper banks and identified a market that Harper was missing. If it doesn’t say Gazette, it’s not Boer War, it’s not an authentic antique, and it’s a “fake.”Ĭontrary to popular belief, the Gazelie banks were made around the same time as the Harper Banks. The original Harper money boxes are very scarce and are highly prized by vintage money box collectors, however, there are the alternative “Gazelie” banks that have grown in popularity over the past century. Some collectors seem to draw a line in the sand here. Pictures of the box have been provided below.

However, this statement has not been validated. There are but a scant few that were finished with beautiful multi-colored surface (Source: The Penny Bank Book by Andy & Susan Moore).ĭuring my research, I also came across what is said to be the original box that the Harper banks were sold in. We find a politician swollen to gargantuan proportion by his insatiable appetite for power and political advancement. These iconic figural banks are an excellent example of political satire. The pictures below depict some original Harper money boxes, made in England – circa 1885.

Due to this, the pipes from the Harper banks often got lost or broke. The pipe is also very slender and long – resembling a saxophone. The original Harper banks were made of cast iron and were manufactured as still banks (without any moving parts) – so the pipe in the Harper banks was fixed. Some Harper money boxes also have a “made in England” inscription on the back, underneath the previously mentioned text. “TRANSVAAL MONEY BOX” is written boldly on Kruger’s top hat, and “By Permission of the Proprietors of the Westminster Gazette,” on Kruger’s back – across his shoulders. The money boxes weigh around 1.2kgs and are roughly 16cm tall and 12cm wide.

Wherever he went, photos showed him with his pipe. “Paul Kruger’s whole life had been to serve as a bulwark of his people against the aggression of British colonial interests in South Africa. Nicknamed Oom Paul (“Uncle Paul”), he came to international prominence as the face of the Boer cause against the British. Stephanus Johannes Paulus “ Paul” Kruger (10 October 1825 – 14 July 1904) was one of the dominant political and military figures in 19th-century South Africa, and President of the South African Republic (or Transvaal) from 1883 to 1900. This article uncovers the history of the popular antique cast iron money boxes that depict the late Transvaal president, Paul Kruger.
