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Posted

Why has it got george ii on it. 1790 was that not george iii is the token a error.

Most likely to prove it's not a forgery of a currency piece. The mistake is so obvious that it would probably constitute a defence even in the law of that time.

Posted (edited)

Why has it got george ii on it. 1790 was that not george iii is the token a error.

I wondered the same thing for a few seconds! It is a little more unusual, but Peckris is 100% correct and, given the sheer volume of these tokens, I wouldn't say they are collected enough that a slightly rarer variant would be financially appreciated!

Edit: seuk could be interested? If he doesn't see this, it could be worth Private Messaging him for his input...he would provide you with a definitive answer for sure!

Edited by Coinery
Posted

It is a brass gaming token.

The majority of these have strange inscriptions,dates,monarchs.

They we produced in vast quantities in Victorian times.

So many people think they have found a guinea.

A gold guinea will weigh approx 8g whereas these brass tokens approx 3.5g.

At coin fairs you can take your pick for less than £1 each although some suckers

on Ebay pay more.

Posted

Some of those gaming tokens replaced the 'normal' legend with 'IN MEMORY OF THE GOOD OLD DAYS' which is rather fun.

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