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#61
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![]() "Peter Masson" wrote in message ... I think I've only once seen a crown used as payment in a normal transaction - around 1955 a boy in the class paid his week's dinner money (5 shillings) using one. I didn't think that crown coins were intended for general circulation, and were used mainly as commemorative pieces because they were too big. But they were legal, so there technically would have been no problem using it. I know that there was a pre-decimilisation 10-shilling banknote, but was there ever a five-shilling banknote? Incidentally, I'd read a while ago that some of the five-pound coins, which are also crown-sized, had come into general circulation. |
#62
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![]() "Charles Ellson" wrote in message ... On Wed, 11 Jun 2008 18:11:27 +0100, "Peter Masson" wrote: That might be down to interpretation. The last intentionally-regular issues for general circulation seem to have been after the 1887 Royal Jubilee. Since then have been mostly commemorative issues but even before Victoria's time they don't seem to have been established as an "everyday" issue. I suspect their size possibly clashed with some kind of practical threshold above which coins were inconvenient to carry or handle. Was the size of coins really an issue, though? How were people in the United States handling the 20-dollar coins, or even the Liberty silver dollars? The Eisenhower dollars of the 1970s were also quite big, and I believe that they were in general circulation. |
#63
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"R.C. Payne" wrote in message
... But given that 1/- is exactly one twentieth of a pound, and 2/- is exactly a tenth, it makes sense that the replacement coin for the same value, ie 5p and 10p be essentially the same coin, and by extention, that the old coins remain in circulation. I certainly enjoyed getting change with a king's rather than queen's head on it. I never happened upon any older than about 1950, but still... I've seen shilling coins dated 1952, bearing George VI's portrait, however. |
#64
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"Peter Masson" wrote in message
... "R.C. Payne" wrote Until the 1960s it was not that unusual to get 19th century coins - with Queen Victoria's head - usually pennies but very occasionally silver coins. Until the new small 5p came in shillings dating back to 1816 were legal tender, though I don't think I ever saw George III, George IV, or William III examples. There were also occasional press stories of silver groats (4d - not Maundy examples) surfacing, being mistaken for silver 3d or sixpences. I think that this still happens today, though clearly not to the same degree. I got a shilling back in my change on one occasion, while on the other I got a 2d coin from the Free State of Ireland. A few years ago, when I visited Canada, I found a 1-cent coin with George VI. I also occasionally find coins from Crown Dependencies, such as Gibraltar or the Isle of Man. Friends of mine have even found coins in their change from as far as St. Helena and the Falkland Islands. |
#65
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![]() wrote I know that there was a pre-decimilisation 10-shilling banknote, but was there ever a five-shilling banknote? In its very early days the Bank of England issued handwritten banknotes for any amount, so they might have issued a five shilling note then. http://www.bankofengland.co.uk/bankn...ut/history.htm During WW1 the Treasury issued ten shilling and one pound currency notes. They also printed five shilling, half crown, and one shilling notes, but AFAIK these were never issued for circulation. http://xray.sai.msu.ru/~mystery/images/money/UK/UK.html Peter |
#66
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"Jim Brittin" [wake up to reply] wrote in
message m... In the early sixties on a number 9 bus going to the Albert Hall a passenger offered a coin to the conductor to pay her fare. The conductor didn't like the look of it but I managed to catch sight of it and exchanged it for another shilling. It was a rather clapped-out George IV one from 1820. This was the oldest legal tender coin I've ever seen in circulation. Something similar happened to me on the Midland Metro. A woman was trying to pay with a 2-pound coin from the 1980s, but the condutor rejected it. I also offered current coins in exchange for that one. |
#67
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![]() "Charles Ellson" wrote in message ... On Thu, 12 Jun 2008 14:33:01 +0100, "R.C. Payne" wrote: MIG wrote: By the time decimalisation arrived much of the "silver" which really was silver (50% to 1946, sterling silver to 1919) had disappeared into back-street smelters due to the metal value exceeding the face value of the coins. The same happened later to some extent with pennies and halfpennies and later with decimal bronze coins (which are now plated steel). I did once find a 1938 2s in my change, but I think that the reason why you hardly ever saw any dated before 1947 was that that was the first year when there wasn't any silver content. Same thing happened in the United States -- it is next to impossible to find any coins from before 1964, because they had all previously contained silver. |
#68
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"Peter Masson" wrote in message
... During WW1 the Treasury issued ten shilling and one pound currency notes. They also printed five shilling, half crown, and one shilling notes, but AFAIK these were never issued for circulation. http://xray.sai.msu.ru/~mystery/images/money/UK/UK.html The Channel Islands still have one-pound notes in regular circulation, incidentally. I refer to both Guernsey and Jersey. |
#69
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#70
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On Sat, 14 Jun 2008 12:41:19 +0100, wrote in
misc.transport.urban-transit: "Charles Ellson" wrote in message .. . On Wed, 11 Jun 2008 18:11:27 +0100, "Peter Masson" wrote: That might be down to interpretation. The last intentionally-regular issues for general circulation seem to have been after the 1887 Royal Jubilee. Since then have been mostly commemorative issues but even before Victoria's time they don't seem to have been established as an "everyday" issue. I suspect their size possibly clashed with some kind of practical threshold above which coins were inconvenient to carry or handle. Was the size of coins really an issue, though? How were people in the United States handling the 20-dollar coins, or even the Liberty silver dollars? Wasn't the $20 gold piece smaller than the Liberty dollar? As I recall gold is more dense than silver. The Eisenhower dollars of the 1970s were also quite big, and I believe that they were in general circulation. They were the same size at the Liberty IIRC. |
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