Guest Guest_chris Posted July 24, 2003 Posted July 24, 2003 hi I have an old coin collection that my brother gave me to pay off a debt he had to me, 10 years ago. I am trying to find out the what where and when of these coins so I can sell them. There is one in particular that I am trying to find info about. It is a coin from 1891. I don't know where it is from or the demonination of it as there is nothig of that sort on it. I don't know much about coins but I will do my best to describe it.It is a dark brown (Walnut) coloured coin that is the size of a Canadian/American 1 cent coin. On one side it has a picture of Queen Victoria (I assume) with the writting "Victoria D: G: BRITT:REG:F:D:" written around the edge of it. On the other side it has a picture of what looks like a person sitting on a wheel, holding a septar of some kind. Under the picture it says "1891" and around the top of the picture it says "F A R 1 H I N G". It is in a cardboard and plastic holder so I can't be sure of the edging on it but it looks like a smooth round edge.That is the best I can do to describe it. If you have any ideas of any information on this coin, please e-mail me. I have searched several books and websites to find out where this coin is from and it's value with no luck.Thank you,Chriskeepercoach3@yahoo.ca Quote
Guest Guest_Chris Posted July 24, 2003 Posted July 24, 2003 I just wanted to add that the picture of the person sitting down is the same as the one on the 1834 Lepton. Lion/Britannia coin....everything else is different than tht coin. Quote
Guest Sue Posted September 2, 2003 Posted September 2, 2003 Did u get a reply?I live in the UkYour coin is a Farthing (half of a half-penny)The queen is VictoriaThe other side is Britanniano clue as to value (i'm not a coin collector) but I think there were a lot of them Quote
Chris Perkins Posted September 2, 2003 Posted September 2, 2003 Dear Chris,Yes indeed it is a Farthing and 1891 is not a hugely rare date and the value will depend on its condition. It a worn circulated condition (which I would guess describes it as you were unable to read the 'H' properly) it probably wouldn't be desired by any serious collectors.The picture below is how it would have looked when new and is priced currently at GBP40.00 which shows how the condition factor really dictates the price, not the age.(Thanks for your help Sue, please become a member and help me out in here!)Chris Perkinswww.predecimal.com Quote
Chris Perkins Posted September 2, 2003 Posted September 2, 2003 And sorry for taking ages to reply too. I used the name Guest_Chris by mistake myself once or twice and didn't notice your message was a new one not by me!Chriswww.predecimal.com Quote
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