Couldn't decide the best place to put a question about old coins, but they do seem mainly historical. I would be glad of ideas how to use or dispose of them please. I have a 1951 George VI Festival of Britain crown (5/- piece); two crowns from the Queen's Coronation in 1953; two Silver Wedding crowns, 1947 - 1972. Also, in an original pack, a set of pre-decimal coins including the 'robin' farthing, the ship-backed halfpenny, a 12 sided threepenny bit and the rather large half-crown. Suggestions welcome please.
Get them checked out by all means but don't expect too much the coronation crowns for instance where given to school children and must have been minted by the tens of thousands (I've just looked and I've three still in the presentation cases), but you never know.Why not save them for your kids, my sister had five sets of pre decimal coins and a selection of commemerative coins mounted and framed for each of her kids and they look pretty good on the wall
Pristine decimal Crowns are unlikely to realise more than �1 or �2 above their face value of 25p, while pre-decimal coins may exhibit an increase in value somewhere in the range �3-�30...
Thank you for your replies. It's an interesting subject but obviously very large numbers were minted so the face value doesn't count for much. I do wonder though whether they might have any silver content and metal value?
1951 George VI Festival of Britain crown (5/- piece)
are fetching about 6pound on ebay
two crowns from the Queen's Coronation in 1953
are fetching about 2 squid
two Silver Wedding crowns, 1947 - 1972.
between 2 and 5 pound
Also, in an original pack, a set of pre-decimal coins including the 'robin' farthing, the ship-backed halfpenny, a 12 sided threepenny bit and the rather large half-crown.
also about 1 -5 pound on ebay
Not glum at all kujawski. I didn't expect they would be worth a fortune, but thank you for going to the trouble of finding out about them on e-bay. Perhaps it might be possible to find a practical use for them - pot stands maybe. I'll have to think more about that.