4 Pence (groat), Issued by British Guiana & West Indies, 1911. Minted by Royal Mint, London.
In 1840 the value of the British Guiana guilder was fixed at 1 shilling and 4 pence (16 pence) and as a result, the 4 pence piece was equated to the important 1/4 guilder denomination, known in British Guiana as a ‘bit’.
The 4 pence or groat, therefore, became the principle coin circulating in the colony although 3 pence, 2 pence and 1 1/2 pence silver coins were also provided. The West Indies obtained their coins through the Colonial Bank in British Guiana which led in time to the striking of the silver 4 pence for British Guiana and the West Indies from 1891 until 1916.