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Charlie

1807 Half penny value and grade

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Hi all, I'm new to this forum and quite new to coin collecting. I just wandered if I could get some opinions about the grade of this 1807 half penny and possible value?

Many thanks in advance.

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post-8543-0-95170900-1416082087_thumb.jp

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A very warm welcome Charlie, you will find some very good advice on here and some interesting and valuable reading, enjoy the hobby!

Do you have a focus for your new collection?

You will find this web site 'http://www.coins-of-the-uk.co.uk/' a useful starting place, along with this Forum!

Unless this coin is some scarce variety, it is common and grades around Fine (F), and would cost around £5-£10 to buy one like it

Edited by Paulus

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Near VF bordering vf with a couple of minor problems.

Slightly scarcer date so I would say about £10

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Welcome Charlie.

I agree. Nearly VF. A nice coin to start the hobby with. Do you have any others we could take a look at for you?

Edited by Michael-Roo

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A very warm welcome Charlie, you will find some very good advice on here and some interesting and valuable reading, enjoy the hobby!

Do you have a focus for your new collection?

You will find this web site 'http://www.coins-of-the-uk.co.uk/' a useful starting place, along with this Forum!

Unless this coin is some scarce variety, it is common and grades around Fine (F), and would cost around £5-£10 to buy one like it

Thank you, I hope to collect a type set for each monarch from George III through to pre decimal QEII, I have quite a bit from the latter monarchs that were passed down from my grandfather. I have been making purchases for the past 6 months or so to build up my collection.

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I am a type collector myself, currently trying to limit myself to one very pleasing example of every silver denomination from Charles II to George VI ... trick is, what do you call a type?

Of course I have a smattering of hammered, gold, copper, bronze, decimal, foreign, tokens etc to keep it varied and more interesting to look through, and getting increasingly drawn to hammered!

I am just glad I am not a date run or micro-variety collector, I think I would hate that, but each to their own!

All photos and questions welcomed :)

Edited by Paulus

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Welcome Charlie.

I agree. Nearly VF. A nice coin to start the hobby with. Do you have any others we could take a look at for you?

I do have another 1807 half penny which has some nice detail but unfortunately I think it has been cleaned (not by me).

The first coin I ever bought was an 1887 shilling.

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Nice.

Be sure to check though what you have from your Grandfather for rarities. Wreath crowns. H and KN pennies. 1946 and 49 threepenny bits etc. If you find you have a 1905 half crown your Grandpa was a canny bloke ;).

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Don't worry about it Charlie. Everyone of us bought 1887 silver when we were starting out. Even the members who now spend squilions on coins.

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Unfortunately no rarities. It took some time to sort through the collection, everything was in an old wooden box. A mixture of British decimal and pre decimal and a lot of world coins which were fun to research as not all were obvious as to where they were from. All sorted and researched now.

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Nothing wrong with 1887 silver, that's where you will find the best grade for your money if you're a type collector!

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I got this 1806 (I don't think 1807 is any rarer) halfpenny for £20 or so recently, if that's any guide - respectfully it is a better grade than the one in your pics, perhaps GVF?

1806_HP_Sellers_zps7ff2f9ab.png

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FOR WEAR ONLY <------ it's VF (obverse NVF, reverse GVF). Trouble is, there's too much else wrong with it, such as rim dinks, slight pitting, and uneven toning. So for value I'd say less than VF - possibly GF only.

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That's nice, the detail on it is far better. I'm a big fan of George III coppers.

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Paulus:

You're right on both counts. 1887 silver can still be found at bargain prices.

In higher grades the 1807 halfpenny is harder to come by than the 1806. However, at £20, your 1806 was a good buy.

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I am a type collector myself, currently trying to limit myself to one very pleasing example of every silver denomination from Charles II to George VI ... trick is, what do you call a type?

One of every denomination for every ruler Paulus, or coverage of all denominations across the whole range? Was just thinking good luck with the William IV crown :)

That's nice, the detail on it is far better. I'm a big fan of George III coppers.

Me too. Speaking of type collecting, my goals at the minute are fairly modest but then around certain periods I'd like to do a bit more and definitely George III copper falls into this bracket. Potentially anything that came out of the Soho mint is on the cards.

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If you love G3 copper Charlie, I am getting much enjoyment from picking up the odd token from 1790 onwards, when there was a massive shortage of copper coinage. Fantastic pieces of social history at affordable prices in decent grade IMO.

To see some of the top grades brilliantly photographed look at this thread:

http://www.predecimal.com/forum/topic/8342-lets-see-your-copper-coins-tokens-or-medals/

Edited by Paulus

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I am a type collector myself, currently trying to limit myself to one very pleasing example of every silver denomination from Charles II to George VI ... trick is, what do you call a type?

One of every denomination for every ruler Paulus, or coverage of all denominations across the whole range? Was just thinking good luck with the William IV crown :)

One of every denomination for every ruler Paulus, or coverage of all denominations across the whole range? Was just thinking good luck with the William IV crown :)

I limit my targets to coins issued for general circulation Damian (conveniently), but it is still very challenging!

Edited by Paulus

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Of course!

Paulus, you're right. 1790s token halfpennies are a great suggestion. So much social and political history to explore. In fact, your mentioning them has me reaching for the tray right now…...

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Nothing wrong with 1887 silver, that's where you will find the best grade for your money if you're a type collector!

And if you're a variety collector, getting all 4 kinds of 1887 shilling is fun.

Not to mention 3 halfcrowns, 4 florins, 3 threepences, 3 double florins, and SEVEN sixpences.

All 1887, all silver.

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Nothing wrong with 1887 silver, that's where you will find the best grade for your money if you're a type collector!

And if you're a variety collector, getting all 4 kinds of 1887 shilling is fun.

Not to mention 3 halfcrowns, 4 florins, 3 threepences, 3 double florins, and SEVEN sixpences.

All 1887, all silver.

Exactly Declan, and if you want any of those Jubilees in a different date, you will pay a premium! Let's hear it for 1887! :)

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Paulus:

You're right on both counts. 1887 silver can still be found at bargain prices.

In higher grades the 1807 halfpenny is harder to come by than the 1806. However, at £20, your 1806 was a good buy.

Up to a point - I'm having real and enduring difficulty finding a genuine top grade (GEF or better) 1806 halfpenny to go with my penny and farthing; they're nowhere near as easy as people think. Common as hell up to VF+ but progressively harder after that, especially one without complications.

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You can find loads of lovely token halfpennies for £10 or £15 I would not spend less than this as you are likely to get just common low grade coins for £5 or less.

They really are a great field to start collecting

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