Twopence (British pre-decimal coin) explained

Country:United Kingdom
Denomination:Twopence
Value:2d sterling
Mass:56.7
Mass Ounce:2
Diameter:41
Diameter Inch:1.6
Edge:Plain
Composition:Copper
Years Of Minting:1797
Obverse:British pre-decimal twopence 1797 obverse.png
Obverse Design:Profile of George III
Obverse Designer:Conrad Heinrich Küchler
Obverse Design Date:1797
Reverse:British pre-decimal twopence 1797 reverse.png
Reverse Design:Britannia
Reverse Designer:Conrad Heinrich Küchler
Reverse Design Date:1797
Mint Marks:SOHO, below and to the right of Britannia.

The British twopence (2d) (or) coin was a denomination of sterling coinage worth two pennies or of a pound. It was a short-lived denomination in copper, being minted only in 1797 by Matthew Boulton's Soho Mint.

These coins were made legal tender for amounts of up to one shilling by a proclamation of 26 July 1797.[1] Short-lived twopence coins in silver were also minted in 1817, 1818 and 1820. Twopence coins were made redundant in 1860 with the advent of bronze coinage.[2] The twopence was the largest and heaviest copper coin to circulate across Britain,[3] and second largest and heaviest coin in British circulation after emergency money issued locally under Charles I.[4]

History

The minting of silver pennies for general circulation was halted by the British government in 1660, because the cost of silver had risen too high.[5] By the late 18th century this policy had caused a deficiency in the number of circulating pennies, and many merchants and mining companies had taken to issuing their own copper tokens. For example, the Parys Mining Company on Anglesey issued huge numbers of tokens (although their acceptability was limited).[6]

In 1797 to alleviate this coin shortage, the government authorised Matthew Boulton to strike copper pennies and twopences at his Soho Mint in Birmingham.[2] As it was a requirement that a coin's face value should correspond to the value of the base metal, each was made from two pence worth of copper (2 ounces), making the coins significantly larger than earlier pennies which had been struck in silver. Their large size, combined with the thick rim, led to the nickname "cartwheels".[1] [7] [8] All "cartwheel" twopences are marked with the date 1797. In total, around 720,000 such coins were minted.[1]

By 1802, the production of privately issued provincial tokens had ceased.[9] [10] However, in the next ten years the intrinsic value of copper rose. The return of privately minted token coinage was evident by 1811 and became endemic by 1812 as more of the government-issued copper coinage was melted down for trade.[10] The Royal Mint undertook a massive recoinage programme in 1816, with large quantities of gold and silver coin being minted. To thwart the further issuance of private tokens, in 1817 an act of Parliament was passed which forbade their manufacture under severe penalties.[10]

A short-lived twopence denomination in silver was also produced, with circulation issues in 1817, 1818 and 1820,[11] after which silver twopence coins were issued only as Maundy money.

In 1857, a survey by the Royal Mint found that around one-third of all copper coinage had become worn or mutilated, often by advertisements. A couple of years later Thomas Graham, the master of the mint, convinced William Ewart Gladstone, Chancellor of the Exchequer, that so large a proportion of copper coinage must be taken out of circulation that it was worth introducing an entirely new coinage which would be "much more convenient and agreeable in use".[2] New bronze coins were introduced in 1860, with a face value that was no longer required to match the value of the base metal. A year later, withdrawal of the old copper coinage began.[2]

Design

The 1797 coin was minted in copper, with a weight of and a diameter of .[1] The obverse features a right-facing portrait of George III, and incused into the rim are the words . The initial K appears on the lowest fold of the drapery at the base of the effigy, indicating that the design is the work of the German engraver Conrad Heinrich Küchler.[1] The reverse, also designed by Kuchler,[1] shows a left-facing seated figure of Britannia, with a trident held loosely in her left hand and an olive branch in her outstretched right. There are waves about her feet, with a small ship to the left and a Union Jack shield below and to the right. On the upper part of the rim is incused the word and on the lower part the date . The word appears next to the shield, indicating that the coin came from the Soho Mint.[6]

Nickname (diminutive)

Tuppence, sometimes abbreviated to “Tuppy” is a diminutive or nickname, often given to a young child; cf. the fictional detective Prudence "Tuppence" Cowley, and the actress Tuppence Middleton, who takes her name from her mother's childhood nickname. It may relate to the smallness of the coin - the small coin used as Maundy money after the 1820s. It may also relate to its relative rarity, being produced initially in 1797 as a very large “cartwheel” copper coin and thereafter only as Maundy money as a rare and very small silver coin, largely given away only by the monarch. Only a few thousand are produced each year by the Royal Mint.

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: The cartwheel penny and twopence of 1797 . Royal Mint Museum . 15 May 2014.
  2. Book: Christopher Edgar Challis . A New History of the Royal Mint . 1992 . . 978-0-521-24026-0.
  3. Web site: Rachel . 2018-08-22 . The remarkable story of when a British 2 pence weighed the same as a Mars Bar… . 2023-07-01 . Change Checker . en-GB.
  4. Web site: British Twopence or Two Pence. . 2023-07-01 . 24carat.co.uk.
  5. Web site: Penny . Royal Mint Museum . 16 May 2014.
  6. Book: George A. Selgin . Good Money: Birmingham Button Makers, the Royal Mint, and the Beginnings of Modern Coinage, 1775-1821 . 2008 . University of Michigan Press . 978-0-472-11631-7.
  7. Web site: Cartwheels . Living in the Past . 17 May 2014.
  8. Book: Carson, Robert Andrew Glendinning. Robert Carson (numismatist) . Coins of the world . 1962 . Harper . 247. 9780060007508 .
  9. Book: Pye, Charles . Charles Pye (Birmingham)

    . Charles Pye (Birmingham) . A Correct and Complete Representation of All the Provincial Copper Coins, Tokens of Trade, and Cards of Address, on Copper: Which Were Circulated as Such Between the Years 1787 and 1801 . Second . 1801 . M. Young . Birmingham . 4.

  10. Book: Hocking, William John . Catalogue of the Coins, Tokens, Medals, Dies, and Seals in the Museum of the Royal Mint . 1906 . Darling & Son Ltd. . London . 327–343.
  11. Book: Remick, Jerome . The Guide Book and Catalogue of the British Commonwealth Coins . 1971 . Regency Coin and Stamp Co. Ltd. . Winnipeg, Canada . 208.