Ahead of the 50th anniversary of Decimalisation, The Royal Mint reveals the rarest coins in circulation
The Royal Mint has today posted the mintage figures for the calendar year of 2019, providing the only official guide to the rarest coins in circulation.
In 2019 over 500 million coins were released into circulation, including three new 50 pence designs celebrating Arthur Conon Doyle’s iconic Sherlock Holmes, and Paddington the Bear at St Paul’s Cathedral and the Tower of London.
The figures have been revealed ahead of the 50th anniversary of Decimalisation, which takes place on 15th February 2021 and saw the introduction of many of the coins used today. The changeover inspired thousands of people to become coin collectors, and over the decades the 50 pence grew to become Britain’s most collectable coin.
The shape of the 50 pence made it the ideal canvas for special commemorative designs, and over 70 events, anniversaries and individuals have been celebrated on circulating 50 pence pieces. The famous 2009 Kew Gardens 50p remains the most coveted coin in circulation, with a mintage of just 210,000. Other rare designs include the 2011 Olympic 50p’s and the highly collectible Peter Rabbit 2018 coins.
The Royal Mint’s Director of UK Currency, Mark Loveridge, comments; “The 50p was introduced as part of decimalisation and has grown to become Britain’s favourite coin. The innovate shape of the coin makes it perfect for commemorative designs, and over the years we’ve commemorated many iconic occasions, events and individuals on a 50p.
“Coin collecting remains as popular as ever, and we were delighted to release a number of special designs into circulation in 2019. The Kew Gardens remains the most coveted coin, with a mintage of just 210,000 but it’s always exciting to find a special design in your change. As we approach the 50th anniversary of decimalisation, we are proud that this iconic work of art remains in the nation’s pocket.”
In addition to making coins for the UK, The Royal Mint is also the world’s largest export mint and produced around three billion coins and blanks for 30 countries in 2019-20.
| 2019 coins | Total mintage figures |
|---|---|
| 50p Sherlock | 8,602,000 |
| 50p Paddington at the Tower | 9,001,000 |
| 50p Paddington at St Paul’s | 9,001,000 |
| Mintage year | 50 pence coins | Total mintage figures |
|---|---|---|
| 2009 | Kew Garden | 210,000 |
| 2011 | Olympic Wrestling | 1,129,500 |
| 2011 | Olympic Football | 1,161,500 |
| 2011 | Olympic Judo | 1,161,500 |
| 2011 | Olympic Triathlon | 1,163,500 |
| 2018 | Peter Rabbit | 1,400,000 |
| 2018 | Flopsy Bunny | 1,400,000 |
| 2011 | Olympic Tennis | 1,454,000 |
| 2011 | Olympic Goalball | 1,615,500 |
| 2011 | Olympic Shooting | 1,656,500 |
The full mintage figures can be found on The Royal Mint’s website: https://www.royalmint.com/currency/uk-currency/mintages/
Continental Currency, the Dream of American Independence, and Connecting Cash to History
New Q. David Bowers Book Explores the Money of the Revolution
As a publisher and a numismatist, I’m always on the lookout for “coin books” that can leap from the hobbyist world of antiques and collectibles into the bigger river of mainstream American history. This goal is more elusive than you might expect. But the potential is always there, because the pleasures of coin collecting and the pleasures of studying history are so closely related.
If you’re an active collector of old coins, paper money, tokens, and medals, you appreciate the connections between these objects and the broad tapestry of our national story. They’re fundamental pieces of material culture—a scholarly term for the physical objects, resources, and architecture that surround us and define us (things that help us survive, that aid our labor, that create an identity, that solidify social relationships, etc.). Coins and paper money have been used in North America day in and day out for generations, going back to the colonial era. They’re as intimately connected to American life as are newspapers, family portraits, silverware, and letters mailed back home. History you can hold in your hand, as it has been said.
The study of coins and paper currency is part of the art and science of numismatics. The wider discipline covers the study of all aspects of money, as well as other payment media and systems (such as barter) that humans have used to settle debts and exchange goods. Numismatics involves other social sciences: economics, quantitative and qualitative economic history, political science, and the like. Its scope also includes mining, metallurgy, mechanics, and other hard sciences and technology that go into the physical creation of coins and printing on paper. It includes design, sculpture, engraving, and fine arts similarly involved in making coins and bank notes. For a numismatist, a coin is much more than just a coin! It’s an artifact of its times. It has a lot to tell about the people who created it, and those who used it.
In our fast-paced world, historians as a general class rarely get the credit they deserve for helping us understand the past (and thereby the present). This has been changing in recent years, and it’s gratifying to watch as serious history grows into a popular consumable. A case study: Lin-Manuel Miranda’s 2015 smash-hit musical Hamilton, itself based on historian Ron Chernow’s award-winning 2004 book Alexander Hamilton, about the Founding Father who created the nation’s financial system and was our first Treasury secretary.
The entertaining packaging of history is perhaps good and bad for numismatics. On the one hand, anything that popularizes history—assuming it’s well researched and balanced—is good for elevating knowledge overall, and has the potential to spark interest in history’s many highways and byways, including all manner of material culture. On the other hand, with so much entertainingly produced history available, in so many easily accessible formats (television, movies, online videos, even Broadway musicals), a quieter avenue like coin-collecting might get lost on the map. Numismatics, misunderstood, could run the risk of being sidelined as a narrow specialty—one where you “learn more and more about less and less, until you know everything about nothing”—rather than being appreciated as a permeating science that touches every aspect of American life.
As the subtitle of author Todd Andrlik’s 2012 book Reporting the Revolutionary War says, “Before it was history, it was news.” This applies to money as much as anything, and it’s important to remember that before coins and paper currency became historical collectibles, they were new, freshly minted or printed, often experimental, and, during the American fight for independence, a vibrant act of revolution themselves. Capturing that energy and sense of uncharted newness, while bringing order to its complexity, is a challenge. Among American historians, none is so qualified to write about the money of the American Revolutionary War as Q. David Bowers. His work in the field, which started in the 1950s, is innovative, prolific, and ongoing.
With more than fifty books to his credit, Bowers ranks among the greats of our nation’s historians—those who have lifted high the lamp of knowledge. Certainly in the field of economic history he is a unique, and uniquely productive, author.
Bowers and the Bridging of the Mainstream History / Numismatics Gap
Dave Bowers has anecdotally told the story of a well-known Civil War historian he chatted with after a lecture. He asked the expert what he knew about Civil War money. The reply was, essentially, “I know that Confederate currency was nearly worthless before the end of the conflict.” No deep knowledge of the wartime birth of new banking systems, no intimacy with the way the nation’s biggest military mobilization was financed. On the level of day-to-day life during the war, he could share nothing of, for example, the vital role played by little bronze tokens minted in the tens of millions by hundreds of private businessmen. Were those tokens “money”? Were they crucially important to Americans during the early 1860s? Yes and yes! “Civil War tokens” fueled the engine of daily commerce after all legal-tender federal coins—not just gold and silver, but even lowly copper cents—were hoarded by a fearful and war-weary public. Knowledge of this sort goes beyond valuing coins and currency as “collectibles.” It gets to the heart of their true worth, as artifacts of the American experience.
In the Guide Book of Continental Currency and Coins (publication date: March 2021), Dave Bowers has written a volume that bridges the gap between numismatics and mainstream history. He provides a fresh understanding of the American Revolution using numismatics as his lens. For many readers this will be radical and new. History buffs who know the battles, the generals, and the politics will now also understand the financial and economic forces of the Revolution. This is not a dusty math lesson or a lecture on the “dismal science” of economics. Rather, it’s a fascinating exploration of national-level financial experimentation, as well as the day-to-day monetary life of Americans, both Tory and revolutionary.
How was Continental Currency produced; how were the notes distributed? Who signed them? Before all that, how were they even authorized—when the Continental Congress had no traditional foundation for a paper-money issue, no gold or silver to back up the paper and ink? How could Congress raise money to fight a war that was partially enflamed by tax collection? How strong was the promise to redeem the paper after the war? Such a promise would require an unruly volunteer army to conquer the greatest military force on earth!
The human stories that emerge are sometimes funny, sometimes terrifying, and always enlightening. Did a New Yorker really wallpaper his rooms with Continental Currency during the war? How did General Washington threaten those who refused to accept the money as payment for goods? What happened to Quakers who, for religious reasons, refused to handle the paper money? What were Spanish silver dollars, and how did they figure into the emerging economy? How did the eccentric Massachusetts businessman “Lord” Timothy Dexter make a fortune speculating in war debt and Continental Currency?
Some facts are surprising, and rarely covered in histories of the Revolution—for example, it was illegal during the war to say anything negative about the new paper money, and many Americans were jailed for public criticism, a concept that would be unthinkable to later generations. Bowers shares and comments on newspaper accounts from both sides of the conflict, some neutrally reporting the monetary news of the day, some degrading the “dirty trash” currency. He tells of citizens “burnt in the brawn of the left thumb” for the crime of passing counterfeit money—and even being executed for the “pernicious tendency.”
On the artistic and technical side, Bowers lays out the designs and rich symbolism used on Continental Currency notes. He tells how they were printed, and the ingenious techniques employed to frustrate counterfeiters. And he tells of Benjamin Franklin and others who influenced the look and feel of the new money.
For collectors, he describes how to grade Continental Currency—a factor crucial to valuation. He gives rarity ratings, typical prices in multiple grades, and advice on market conditions.
He explores the enigmatic Continental dollar coins (or are they medals?), laying out a couple hundred years of research and speculation, including startling recent theories based on new research and insights.
A Modern-Day Benson Lossing
Within the discipline of numismatic history, Q. David Bowers has no peers. He’s extremely productive, he’s popularized the field and connected it to other social sciences, and he’s influential and inspirational to other researchers. The Guide Book of Continental Currency and Coins adds to his standing among American historians, and continues to elevate the status of numismatics as a serious branch of American history, as important as the popular works of Benson J. Lossing or Barbara Tuchman or David McCullough—a companion to presidential and other political history, social-movement history, military history, and every other highway and byway that history buffs happily explore.
By Q. David Bowers; foreword by Christopher R. McDowell; research associates Julia Casey and Ray Williams; valuations editor Bruce Hagen.
ISBN 0794848400
Softcover, 6 x 9 inches, 288 pages
Full color
Retail $19.95 U.S.
https://whitman.com/a-guide-book-of-continental-currency-and-coins/
Minshull Trading Brings 15M in Rare Coins to MA-Shops
(Sarasota, Florida) January 25, 2021 – MA-Shops (www.ma-shops.com), the world’s most trusted numismatic marketplace featuring coins and dealers from around the world, announced that MA-Shops Minshull Trading (www.ma-shops.com/minshull) has joined its online marketplace. With more than a $15 million dollar rare coin inventory, Minshull Trading is perhaps the largest dealer of U.S. Rare Coins and carries multi-million dollar inventories of U.S., Modern, World and Ancient coins.
“We enthusiastically welcome Minshull Trading to MA-Shops. As an established and respected leader in the numismatic industry for three decades, their impressive repertoire includes the entire scope of numismatic history,” said Joachim Schwiening, Founder and CEO, MA-Shops.
Minshull Trading Partner Brian Hodge, also President of Numismatics and a PNG member said, “We are pleased to be a part of MA-Shops marketplace, and resonate with their support and commitment to collectors and the industry. Their platform gives us the opportunity to showcase our products to an expanded and loyal base of customers worldwide.”
With more than $3 billion in coin sales and over 140 years of combined numismatic experience, including 40 years by the Principal Owner, Minshull Trading customers have come to rely on them as a trusted source. The company is a member of PNG, ICTA, FUN, CSNS, a life member of the ANA, and a regular Red Book contributor.
Among the rare coins offered by MA-Shops Minshull Trading are:
1894-O $10 MS62 NGC UNC-62. BRANCH MINT PROOF, CAMEO. Unique as Certified. The only other Branch Mint Proof known for the series is the 1844-O, which last sold for over $2,000,000.
1861-O 50C MS62+ NGC UNC-62. BRANCH MINT PROOF. Unique as Certified. Once owned by the Billionaire Dupont Family. Formerly displayed in the Louisiana State Museum before Hurricane Katrina.
1820 $5 PR64 NGC CH/GEM UNC-64. The 1820 Specimen Strike Half Eagle essentially precedes the Proof era, was clearly specially handled and struck by mint employees and given the coveted ‘Specimen’ designation by NGC as evidence of that special handling.
About MA-Shops
MA-Shops, the world’s most trusted numismatic marketplace, features coins and dealers from around the world on one, easy to use platform. Collectors can buy with confidence knowing all ancient, U.S., modern and world coins, medals, banknotes, militaria and antiquities offered on the website are guaranteed. Founded in 2005 by Joachim Schwiening, the company has offices in Germany and Florida. MA-Shops memberships and affiliations include: ANA, FUN, PAN, PMG, NCS, NGC and PCGS.
For more information contact Kathy Bender, U.S. Business Development Manager, at bender@ma-shops.com.
New Large-Format Book Provides Snapshot of History through the Lens of American Coinage
Coin collectors and history buffs alike are sure to enjoy Past Tense, an entertaining, large-format book of author Rod Gillis’ colorful “Past Tense” monthly column, which appeared in The Numismatist magazine from July 2011 through March 2020. The book is available from the American Numismatic Association for $21.95, plus $4.50 for shipping and handling.
The beautifully rendered, 112-page softcover volume provides snapshots in time – beginning with Continental Currency in 1776 and concluding with the Westward Journey nickel in 2004. In addition to sharing obscure information about select coinage, each page includes fascinating historical information from that year. “Past Tense is a wonderful example of how coins help illustrate history and how history provides context to coin collecting,” says Doug Mudd, curator of the American Numismatic Association’s Money Museum.
With a foreword by Kenneth E. Bressettt, editor emeritus of A Guide Book of United States Coins (the ubiquitous “Red Book”), Past Tense presents Gillis’ columns chronologically by subject date and alphabetically by denomination. A coin index at the back of the book helps readers quickly find their favorite denomination.
Past Tense: History through the Lens of American Coinage – a perfect gift for collectors and history buffs alike – is available from the American Numismatic Association for $21.95 plus $4.50 postage and handling. To order, visit info.money.org/past-tense. Questions should be directed to sgelberd@money.org or call (719) 482-9846.
March 2021 Baltimore Expo Prohibited Due to Mandated COVID-19 Restrictions
Whitman Coin & Collectibles Expo Expands
June 3–5, 2021, Bourse and Events
Stack’s Bowers Galleries Auction Will Still Be Held in March 2021
(Baltimore, Maryland)—The March 25–27, 2021, Whitman Coin & Collectibles Baltimore Expo will not be held as Maryland continues to mitigate the COVID-19 coronavirus pandemic. The Baltimore Convention Center notified Whitman Coin & Collectibles that the event was canceled for March 2021.
The show’s manager plans an expanded “MEGA Bourse” for the June 3–5 Expo, one of the largest numismatic events of the year. It will be held at its regular venue, the Baltimore Convention Center.
Whitman Expo manager Lori Kraft said, “After a long winter, we know that collectors and dealers are eager to get back to business as usual. Nothing beats the excitement of attending a major show in person—and our summer Baltimore Expo will be MEGA.”
Kraft and her Expo team are working to make the June 2021 Baltimore Expo the largest ever. “We will be expanding the bourse to accommodate all dealers that annually attend our March and June events. We encourage first-time dealers to sign up for the June Mega bourse. We anticipate that hobbyists and the public will be out in full force. We want to welcome people to the Convention Center for a fun, energetic show, while keeping everyone comfortable and safe.”
A lineup of new Whitman Publishing books, and educational events and exhibits, is planned for the show.
Whitman’s Guide Book of United States Coins, known hobby-wide as the “Red Book,” celebrates its 75th anniversary in 2021. The June Baltimore Expo will be the scene of giveaways and events in recognition of this numismatic milestone. In addition, the seventh edition of MEGA RED, the expanded 1,504-page version of the Red Book, will be available at the show. Its expanded feature section focuses on silver and modern dollars.
Other special Expo promotions will center around the ever-popular Morgan and Peace silver dollars. This year marks the centennial of the last Morgans and the first Peace dollars, all struck in 1921. The U.S. Mint will issue special tribute coins later in the year. Collector excitement will also rally around the new American Silver Eagle “Flying Eagle” design, also set to debut this year.
Updates and news about the Baltimore Expo will be posted at expo.whitman.com.
Stack’s Bowers Galleries will provide details of its still-scheduled March 2021 auction on their web site, www.stacksbowers.com.
For updates on COVID-19 in Maryland and elsewhere, visit www.cdc.gov/coronavirus/2019-ncov.
