ABOUT
Own this 99.99% pure gold portrait of Kit Coleman, a woman of many firsts and a journalism pioneer.

Through her weekly columns, journalist Kathleen Blake Coleman (1856-1915) pushed the boundaries of expectation for women in journalism during the late 19TH and early 20TH centuries. 'Kit' was a woman of many firsts: she made history 125 years ago by becoming North America’s first accredited woman war correspondent; she helped establish the Canadian Women’s Press Club and served as its first president; and later, she became the first syndicated woman columnist in Canada.

A pioneer deserving of her place on the 2023 Proof Dollar, Kit Coleman is also honoured on this 99.99% pure gold coin, which pairs a portrait of the trailblazing columnist with a map that traces her incredible journey.

A pure gold homage to a journalism pioneer.

Special features

A journalism pioneer. One of Canada’s most successful early presswomen and a woman of many firsts, journalist Kathleen 'Kit' Blake Coleman is honoured on several coins issued in 2023, which marks the 125TH anniversary of her becoming North America’s first accredited woman war correspondent.
A pure gold portrait. A perfect complement to this year’s Fine Silver Proof Dollar! Both coins were designed by the same artist, and your gold coin zooms in on the portrait portion of the collage featured on the Proof Dollar’s reverse.
Very low mintage. Just 1,500 coins are available to collectors worldwide.
Includes serialized certificate. The Royal Canadian Mint certifies all of its collector coins.
NO GST/HST. (if applicable)

Packaging

Your coin is encapsulated and presented in a Royal Canadian Mint-branded clamshell with a black beauty box.

FEATURES

Richly detailed
Crafted in 99.99% pure gold, your coin’s reverse features an outstanding amount of finely engraved details, and it captures both the likeness and legacy of Kit Coleman.

Pencil to paper to precious metal
The Toronto-based journalist is shown penning her weekly newspaper column, while behind her, the map traces her incredible journey—from her birthplace in Ireland to her life and career in Canada, and her many travels abroad.

SPECIFICATIONS
Mintage 1,500
Composition 99.99% pure gold
Weight 7.8 g
Diameter 20 mm
Edge Serrated
Face Value $100
Finish Proof
Packaging Maroon clamshell with black beauty box
Artist Pandora Young (reverse), Susanna Blunt (obverse)

DID YOU KNOW?

She was born Catherine Ferguson in 1856, in County Galway, Ireland, but identified herself privately as Kathleen Willis when she first came to Canada in 1884. She adopted the middle name Blake and by the time she began publishing, she was formally known as Kathleen Blake Watkins, and as Kathleen Blake Coleman when she later remarried.

Her pen name 'Kit' and her public persona had readers guessing both her identity and gender. In her column, Coleman covered a wide range of topics in an attempt to break free from gender-based restrictions imposed upon the few presswomen of that era.

Kit first joined the Toronto Daily Mail as a women’s editor in 1889 in order to support herself and her two young children. Her weekly, seven-column 'Woman’s Kingdom' page featured a mix of observations and advice, thought-provoking articles and travel writings. Coleman was known to go undercover in other cities, such as London and San Francisco, in order to write about social issues and the plight of the poor. Though her travel writings were curtailed after the Mail merged with the Empire in 1895, Kit was dispatched to London in 1897 to cover Queen Victoria’s Diamond Jubilee; while there, she spent time with Sir Wilfrid Laurier, then the prime minister of Canada (and reportedly an avid reader of Coleman’s column).

In 1898, during the Spanish-American War, Coleman became North America’s first accredited woman war correspondent. While she was authorized to accompany American troops in Cuba, her male colleagues and the army commanders on the ground were opposed to the idea of having a woman in their midst, and they prevented her travel. Stranded in Florida, she eventually landed in Cuba in July 1898; while she had missed the main battles, her accounts of the war’s aftermath made her internationally famous.

DESIGN & ARTIST
Reverse Pandora Young

Designed by Canadian artist Pandora Young, your coin’s reverse features a portrait of Toronto-based journalist Kathleen 'Kit' Blake Coleman (1856-1915) penning her weekly column. The map in the background traces the trailblazing reporter’s incredible journey—from her birthplace in Ireland to her life and career in Canada, and her travels as North America’s first accredited woman war correspondent. The obverse features the effigy of Queen Elizabeth II by Susanna Blunt. The obverse also bears a special marking that includes four pearls symbolizing the four effigies that have graced Canadian coins and the double date of her reign.

Pandora Young, Artist
The biggest challenge was conveying the sheer scope of 'Kit' Coleman’s accomplishments. She was intrepid, undaunted and a creative thinker, and those qualities took her on many wide-ranging adventures. Each time it seemed as if she was backed into a corner, she'd think up some ingenious new plan that only made her story more exciting. She elevated thought and discourse, as well as the voices and status of women—this is surely her most immortal legacy, and it is my hope that we can inspire collectors everywhere to learn more about Kathleen Blake Coleman.

PANDORA YOUNG, ARTIST
Dr. Barbara Freeman, Author of Kit’s Kingdom: The Journalism of Kathleen Blake Coleman
Kathleen Blake Coleman, or Kit as she was known to her readers, was a pioneer female journalist in Canada, whose story is told on this well-deserved commemorative coin. She was an Irish immigrant to this country, struggled with single motherhood, and supported her children by producing an eclectic, interesting, and lively women’s page in Toronto’s Daily Mail, which later became the Mail and Empire. She loved to travel and write about her adventures and in 1898, her newspaper sent her to Cuba to cover the Spanish American War, a groundbreaking assignment that won her international fame.

DR. BARBARA FREEMAN, AUTHOR OF KIT’S KINGDOM: THE JOURNALISM OF KATHLEEN BLAKE COLEMAN