• When you click on links to various merchants on this site and make a purchase, this can result in this site earning a commission. Affiliate programs and affiliations include, but are not limited to, the eBay Partner Network.

FS From VDBCoins: Toned British Coins, Betts Medals, and Conder Tokens
0

1 post in this topic

We are offering here and on our site (same terms and prices) an extensive selection of British coins, Conder tokens, and a couple of Betts medals, all chosen for their excellent-quality surfaces, reasonable pricing, considerable historicity, and high quotient of gorgeousitousness. Regular PayPal is fine, or snail-mail checks are fine as well. No sales tax unless you live in Virginia and buy <$1000. Free shipping over $99. No-hassle 7-day returns for any reason.

About Us: We at VDBCoins have been around for a long time, doing business under the same name and the same website, VDBCoins.com  You can be assured of a pleasant, pain-free transaction every time, and we ship next business day via USPS after funds clear.

We hope you find something you like, and you can buy here or easily through our website, as you wish. But if nothing else, we hope you enjoy reading our descriptions and admiring some phenomenal, vastly underrated coins. We have dozens more coins for sale on our website, which is quite easy to use.

And we wish you long days and pleasant nights. Kind regards, George / VDBCoins.com

ct5c9c1482on.jpg
Great Britain 1887 Jubilee Head One Florin MS63 PCGS S-3925 Pretty Surfaces! $175
We’ve always liked the 1887 silver coinage with HRH Queen Victoria wearing the short-lived Jubilee Head crown. This Select Mint State one florin (= two shillings) features lovely pastel toning with a few small hits on the portrait that account for the grade, but they blend nicely into the background color palette and are not overt.

Background: Queen Victoria celebrated the 50th year of her reign on June 20, 1887, with a banquet to which 50 European kings and queens were invited. The Jubilee Head crown was roundly criticized in contemporary media as being ridiculously small for Victoria’s, ahem, rather zaftig self. The design was replaced in 1893 by the Veiled Head design, symbolizing Victoria’s grief at the death of her beloved Prince Albert.

2giulwcf7qjn.jpg
Great Britain 1887 Jubilee Head Double Florin MS65 NGC, Arabic 1, S-3923 Gorgeous Gem! KM-763. $695
A nice complement to the 1887 Jubilee Head one florin we purchased from the same collection. This is a lovely Gem-certified NGC example. The NGC certification number is 3804200-002. NGC Population: 9 in MS65, 1 finer (10/2019).

Background: The double florin was equal to four shillings, and both Arabic 1 and Roman 1 (S-3922) varieties were issued in 1887. The 1887 Jubilee Head designs only lasted through 1892. Although the small Jubilee Head crown that Victoria wore received the bitterest criticism, the reverse design was equally unpopular. One wag at the time called it “radiating tea trays and kitchen pokers.”

yrdx0t5dzphs.jpg
Great Britain One Shilling 1s 1817 Overdate! Gorgeous Toned MS66 PCGS S-3790 var. $950
Laureate head of George III facing right, date below. Rev. crowned shield with garter edge, milled, struck on coin axis. This is a apparently an unrecorded overdate example—although we are unsure whether the underdigit is part of an 8, a 6 (which makes more sense to us), or something else. This was previously in the Heritage September 2012 Long Beach auction in an earlier slab.

There it was described as “superlative coin in terms of its preservation, boldly detailed with a crisp portrait and every tiny detail of the shield showing, undisturbed rich satiny luster, and gorgeous pastel silvery magenta-gold and blue iridescent toning. As wonderful as this shilling is visually, its most enchanting feature is what appears to be an uncatalogued overdate, with part of an 8 showing to the right of the 7 in the date. Overdate or not, this is a gorgeous coin! Candidate for a finest known Registry Set?”

It is unsurprising but bears mentioning that this beautifully toned coin is also the large Plate Coin for the issue. PCGS Population: 9 in 66, 1 finer in MS67, although we doubt a more beautiful survivor of this issue could exist.
Ex: Long Beach Signature (Heritage, 9/2012), lot 24038, which realized $1,028.13.

dzrrfx1n03vn.jpg
Great Britain 1937 Nickel-Brass Threepence 3d Lovely Toned PR64 PCGS S-4112, KM-849. $65
First-year proof issue of 26,000 pieces, with title IND : IMP. Thrift plant on reverse, struck on coin axis. Delightfully toned and conservatively graded.

8c4omgi7km87.jpg
Great Britain 1937 Silver Sixpence 6d Toned PR64 PCGS S-4084, KM-852. $75
Obv. Bare head of George VI. Rev. GRI (GEORGIUS REX IMPERATOR; George, King and Emperor) cipher crowned, struck on coin axis. Lovely teal patina and again, conservatively graded. A first-year proof of this type, struck in 0.500 silver. The proof mintage was a scant 26,000 pieces.

o945vheg2tow.jpg
Great Britain 1736 Jernegan Cistern Silver Medal, Betts-169, Eimer-537, AU58 PCGS. $399
39 mm, 20.5 gm. Struck in silver. Obv. Minerva standing between military trophies and emblems of the Arts and Sciences. BOTH HANDS FILL’D FOR BRITAIN around. GEORGE REIGNING in exergue. Rev. Caroline, royally robed, waters a stand of young palm-trees. GROWING ARTS ADORN EMPIRE around, in exergue CAROLINE PROTECTING 1736.

Although the Jernegan Cistern medal is listed in the C. Wyllys Betts’ seminal volume American Colonial History as Illustrated by Contemporary Medals, any relation to American history is tangential at best. Some took the palm trees and Caroline to be a reference to the Carolinas, although Betts himself disclaimed any more-direct association with America. (Betts points to the 1863 cataloguing of the Lilliendahl Collection by W.H. Strobridge as a source of the misinterpretation.) The medals were struck as “tickets” for a lottery to win a giant silver urn or cistern made by London goldsmith and banker Henry Jernegan.

This example shows beautiful color with trivial field chatter but no more than a light touch of high-point wear on Caroline’s and Minerva’s left breast and arm.

bn20ofle79ts.jpg
Great Britain Scotland 1795 Halfpenny Conder Token, Lanarkshire, Glasgow, Rule Britannia-Let Glasgow Flourish DH-6a MS63BN PCGS. $159
Obv (according to Dalton and Hamer—I would call this the reverse). Arms of Glasgow, LET GLASGOW FLOURISH around. “Rev.” Seated figure of Britannia with shield and spear, RULE BRITANNIA around, date 1795 in exergue. Milled edge. Nice crusty original toning on both sides makes this an attractive piece. The Conder tokens of Scotland in general are more difficult to find than the extensive English series, although this particular Glasgow token is not uncommon. A verse of "Rule, Britannia," anyone?

fnbm0509ifuq.jpg
Great Britain 1793 Halfpenny Conder Token, Warwickshire, Birmingham, Child-Hedgehogs DH-50 MS63BN PCGS. $219
Obv. Seminude boy holding a wrench and turning a crank. 1793 in exergue, BIRMINGHAM HALFPENNY around. Rev. Crest with four hedgehogs, a fifth atop. INDUSTRY HAS IT’S SURE REWARDS. (Apparently this aggravating, incorrect possessive has been around for a long time to irritate writers and coin collectors alike.) Edge: CURRENT EVERYWHERE. This example boasts glossy iridescent surfaces with glints of blue, gold, and green, quite appealing.

oda4s7teovej.jpg
Great Britain 1794 Halfpenny Conder Token, Somersetshire, Bath, Bladud-Urn DH-39 MS64BN PCGS. $279
Obv. Figure of Bladud facing left with bow and quiver, around SUCCESS TO THE BATH WATERS | BLADUD FOUNDER OF BATH. Rev. A tea urn with IRONMONGERY BRAZIERY & CUTLERY, F. HEATH and date 1794 in exergue. Edge: PAYABLE BY F. HEATH BATH. This is an extremely appealing and sharply struck example with bluish-red patina and some muted mint red remaining. PCGS Population: 3 in 64BN, 0 finer (10/2019).

5i6knpt4edg6.jpg
‘1664’ (Post-1880) Betts-40 French Indies Restrike Medal, SP65BN PCGS. $SALE PENDING
29.83 gm. Designed by Jean Mauger. Edge: Cornucopia, “bronze.” The Paris Mint privy mark or edge mark identifies this as a restrike from the 1880–1901 timeframe. Obv: LUDOVICUS XIIII | REX CHRISTIANISSIMUS. (Louis XIV, Most Christian King). Undraped bust of Louis XIV facing right. J. MAUGER F. at lower obv. Rev: JUGENDIS COMMERCIO GENTIBUS | SOCIETATES NEGOTIATORUM | IN UTRAMQUE INDIAM | MDCLXIV in exergue (The people united by commerce. The Societies of Merchants to Both Indies, 1664). Figure of Mercury stands with a caduceus and money bag (representing trade and commerce) behind. Bales of merchandise and blazing altar with banner, sailing ships in background, ready to transport goods to foreign ports.

The Betts medals are quite rare especially in silver, and even this bronze restrike is a treasure as a representative of one of the earliest issues. Ivory engraver and sculptor Jean Mauger (1648–1712) worked at the Paris Mint from 1685 until his death and was responsible for 250 of the 286 medals in the medallic history of “The Sun King” Louis XIV, published in 1702. Louis XIV’s reign of 72+ years was the longest recorded of any European monarch.

C. Wyllys Betts, original cataloger of American Colonial History as Illustrated by Contemporary Medals, donated his extensive collection to Yale. He was a Yale graduate as is this writer; I treasure the memory of visiting, in 2013, the phenomenal Yale Art Museum and its vast, largely unheralded coin collection. I was privileged to discover C. Wyllys Betts’ own Libertas Americana silver medal downstairs in the Art Museum—an event that still gives me goosebumps when I think about it years later. Besides its immense historicity and provenance, it also was roughly a quarter-million dollars or so casually hanging on the wall behind a plexiglass case.

This Betts-40 restrike medal also features some of the most gorgeous original cabinet patina I have ever seen on a bronze or copper coin/medal.

zey61povrvsp.jpg
Great Britain 1794 Halfpenny Conder Token, Somersetshire, Bridgewater, Holloway Drapers-Bridge Water MS63BN PCGS. $179
Obv. A house front view flanked by POST OFFICE and around, I. HOLLOWAY & SON DRAPERS &c. 1794 in exergue. Rev. Part of a castle and part of a bridge, a visual pun for Bridgewater. Around, B.WATER HALFPENNY * FOR CHANGE NOT FRAUD. Edge: PAYABLE IN LONDON, the rest engrailed. PCGS Population: 1 in 63BN, 0 finer (10/2019).

sp61meomyqxt.jpg
Great Britain 1794 Halfpenny Conder Token, Sussex, Chichester, Queen Elizabeth I-Cathedral DH-15 MS63BN PCGS. $279
Obv. A wonderfully detailed full-facing, formal portrait of a crowned HRH Queen Elizabeth I in a high-ruffed gown with beading and jeweled forehead, holding a scepter, a right regal presentation. QUEEN ELIZABETH around. Rev. Straight-on view of cathedral, CHICHESTER HALFPENNY AROUND. 1794 in exergue. Edge: PAYABLE AT DALLYS CHICHESTER. Despite the toning there is much prooflike luster throughout the fields; one could easily believe this to be a proof or specimen strike although we have no other evidence of that. These pieces were also struck in silver. PCGS Population: 4 in 63 BN, 4 finer (10/2019).

4775gs6fb661.jpg
Great Britain 1794 Halfpenny Conder Token, Sussex, Chichester, John Howard Philanthropist-Sun and Moon DH-19 MS62BN PCGS. $159
Obv. Left-facing portrait JOHN HOWARD F * R * S * PHILANTHROPIST. Rev. Building surmounted by a half-moon and sun atop, HALF PENNY on sides. Around, CHICHESTER AND PORTSMOUTH, 1794 in exergue. Edge: PAYABLE AT SHARPS PORTSMOUTH AND CALDECOTTS CHICHESTER. A small die crack runs into the left field from the R of WARD. Lovely color, and deserving of a finer grade in our opinion, despite minor planchet roughness above CHICHESTER. PCGS Population: 1 in 62BN, 3 finer (10/2019).

Background: John Howard (1726–1790) was a prison reformer who was elected Fellow of the Royal Society in 1756. Howard spent decades traveling to several hundred prisons and campaigning for better conditions for prisoners. He himself was briefly held captive by the French when the ship on which he was sailing was commandeered in 1755.

p7n7qr4sstcs.jpg
Great Britain 1794 Halfpenny Conder Token, Warwickshire, Coventry, Lady Godiva DH-249 MS64BN PCGS. $425
Obv. Nude female astride a horse, PRO BONO PUBLICO (“for the public good”) around, 1794 in exergue. Rev. An ancient cross with COV CROSS beneath, COVENTRY HALFPENNY around. Angle of steps points between diagonals of (CO)V. Edge: PAYABLE AT THE WAREHOUSE OF ROBERT REYNOLDS & CO. This piece shows moderate red remaining close to the rims with light brown elsewhere. There is some rim crumbling and a small cud in (B)ONO on the obverse. PCGS Population: 1 in 64BN, 2 finer (10/2019).

Background: The Lady Godiva is among the most famous of Conder tokens due to its subject matter. A different reverse is also found with elephant and castle.

The story of Lady Godiva is likely a myth, but she herself existed in 11th-century England, as “Godgifu” married to Leofric, Earl of Mercia and Lord of Coventry. She supposedly implored her husband to lessen the onerous taxes levied against the people, to which Leofric replied that he would do so only if she rode nude on horseback through the streets. She is said to have doffed her clothes and taken an equestrian spin, asking the people to avert their eyes. But one man, Tom, was said to have peeped, giving rise to the “Peeping Tom” character. The entire story nonetheless appeared only a century after Godgifu’s death, from a writer who habitually stretched the truth. In life Godgifu founded a Benedictine monastery and was noted for her generosity to the church—but her horseback ride appears to be a later fabrication.

ey0h0iyo8mb9.jpg
Great Britain 1796 Halfpenny Conder Token, Gloucestershire, Badminton, Sheaf-Balance DH-48 MS64BN PCGS. $275
Obv. Wheat sheaf, A below, RELIEF AGAINST MONOPOLY. Rev. Pair of scales, 6-1/2 lb, BREAD FOR 1s APRIL 1796 | GOD BE PRAISED. Lovely blue and green with almond patina. PCGS Population: 2 in 64 BN, 0 finer (10/2019).

Background: The Badminton series are not currency tokens and are all fairly scarce, according to the Dalton & Hamer update by Bill McKivor dating from 2015. They commemorate the Duke of Beaufort who lessened the price of wheat during a period of scarcity of corn. Engraved by Willets, made by Kempson.

uvoakwbyvhp4.jpg
Great Britain 1795 Halfpenny Conder Token, Yorkshire, York Cathedral-Cliffords Tower DH-63 MS64BN PCGS. $279
Obv. Fantastically well-detailed rendering of the Great Cathedral at York, YORK * 1795 in exergue. Rev. Hill showing CLIFFORD’S TOWER, flags flying, soldiers crossing a bridge, AD 1100 in exergue. A gorgeous piece with bluish-brown surfaces, lots of luster, and mint red around the devices. PCGS Population: 4 in 64BN, 3 finer (10/2019).

o147rppp46it.jpg
A Token About Coins and Medals: Great Britain 1797 Halfpenny Conder Token, Middlesex, Skidmore’s Aldersgate DH-649 MS64RB PCGS. $259
Obv. Portrait of Aldersgate (an ancient gate in the wall surrounding the City of London) with Jacobs and BT 1670 in exergue. Rev. PK cipher in the center, 1797 date below, around DEDICATED TO COLLECTORS OF MEDALS & COINS (Skidmore’s Reverse Die No. 2, see Dalton & Hamer 2015 reprint edition, page 165). This piece shows prooflike surfaces with a bulging (convex) central obverse, mostly mint red, and a correspondingly somewhat concave central reverse, blue in the center and a ruddy reddish periphery. Pretty but unusual. PCGS Population: 1 in 64RB, 1 finer (10/2019).

abw1cpwd0gei.jpg
Great Britain ND (ca 1790) Halfpenny Token, Middlesex, Pidcock’s Lion and Eagle DH-414 MS64+BN PCGS. $SALE PENDING
Obv. A lion lying down (“couchant’) holding a circular shield reading EXETER CHANGE with PIDCOCK’S EXIBITION around. (Exibition is misspelled on this variety; the DH-415 has it correctly spelled as EXHIBITION.) Rev. An eagle in the center, BIRDS and BEAST around. (The noun disagreement is also corrected on DH-415, which additionally bears the date 1795 at bottom rev.)

This is a stunning near-Gem example of this popular variety with pastel-green and bluish-purple tones contrasting against a light-gold background on both sides. Both the crouching lion and the feathery eagle are marvelously well-detailed throughout due to the excellent, sharp strike. PCGS Population: 1 in 64+BN (this piece), 2 finer (10/2019).

Background: Pidcock’s Exhibition in London featured a wide variety of exotic birds and beasts not normally seen in cosmopolitan London. Elephants, rhinos, zebras, nylghaus (look it up), monkeys, two-headed cows, kangaroos, cockatoos, tigers, ostriches, many more, all formed part of what must have been a memorable menagerie.

725kw4zgetr4.jpg
Great Britain ND (ca 1790) Halfpenny Conder Token, Suffolk, Bury, Plough Fleece-Commerce DH-26 MS64+BN PCGS. $279
Obv. Shield of arms of Bury St. Edmunds. The wolf’s head is about equidistant from the flanking letters, distinguishing it from the DH-25. SUCCESS TO THE PLOUGH & FLEECE, rosette below shield. Rev. Cipher PD above a crown between palm and laurel branches. THE COMMERCE OF BRITAIN. Edge: PAYABLE AT P. DECKS POST OFFICE BURY . X X .. This coin is a full Gem in our opinion, suffused with fantastic luster, prooflike surfaces, and pastel bluish-rose patina. A great Conder token. PCGS Population: 2 in 64+BN, 0 finer (10/2019).

ns19xdhgq458.jpg
A Token About Books: Great Britain ND (ca 1790) Halfpenny Conder Token, Suffolk, Bury, Abbey Gate-Rackhams Book DH-29 MS63BN PCGS. $249
Obv. An ancient gateway, with ABBEY GATE above (softly struck, it resembles SPYGATE). Rev. An open book in center, PAYABLE AT RACKHAMS above, CIRCULATING * LIBRA(last R absent, Y is higher; poor planning on the engraver’s part) | ANGEL HILL | BURY. Edge: OR AT LEATHERDALE’S . X . HARLESTON NORFOLK. Considerable mint red remaining on the reverse. PCGS Population: 1 in 63BN, 3 finer (10/2019).

Background: John Rackham, a printer, had his circulating library opposite the Abbey Gate, Bury.

csnpg9emdac9.jpg
Great Britain ND (ca 1790) Halfpenny Conder Token, Middlesex, Halls, Toucan-Artist DH-319c MS63BN PCGS. $249
Obv. A toucan sitting on a tree branch (although the token is mounted reverse-side-up in the slab). TO THE CURIOUS OBSERVERS OF NATURAL PHENOMENA. Rev. In four lines in the center, THE FIRST ARTIST IN EUROPE. Around in a double circle, T. HALL PRESERVER OF BIRDS BEASTS OR REPTILES CITTY ROAD NEAR FINSBURY SQUARE. Milled edge.

The great-beaked toucan on the obverse makes this particular Conder issue perennially popular, just like the Pidcock’s lion and birds (Middlesex DH-414/415). The surfaces on this piece are a lovely mix of bluish-purple and red-orange, with a bold strike through the crucial (and interesting) central details. The planchet was a tad off-center when this piece was struck, so there is more denticulation visible at the upper obverse rim than at the lower. Comes with old-time collector’s envelope from Schwer Coins in Woodbridge, Suffolk.

nba0l773xjx8.jpg
A Token About Buttons: Great Britain ND (ca 1790) Halfpenny Conder Token, Warkwickshire, Birmingham, Free School-Kempson’s DH-200 MS64BN PCGS. $249
Obv. FREE SCHOOL with detailed building. Rev. Kempson’s Die No. 3 (Dalton and Hamer 2015 edition, page 280): Shield of arms, inner circle MAKER OF BUTTONS * MEDALS &c. BIRMINGHAM, upper arc P. KEMPSON. The upright of the last N is re-engraved, if anyone cares. Edge: Plain. Much prooflike billiance on highly lustrous, well-struck surfaces. PCGS Population: 3 in 64BN, 0 finer (10/2019).

Background: Peter Kempson (1755–1824) was a prolific issuer of Conder tokens, most notably buildings and bridges, gates etc. in London and Birmingham. (Many of the early makers of Conder tokens, including Matthew Boulton of the Soho (Birmingham) Mint, started out making metallic buttons, which after all was a similar process in many ways to striking coins and medals.)

m0cudpkt2of2.jpg
Great Britain ND (ca 1790) Halfpenny Conder Token, Wiltshire, Holt, Herald-Arnot Spa DH-3 MS63BN PCGS. $219
Obv. Winged herald angel blowing horn. HOLT WILSHIRE MINERAL WATERS DISCOVER’D 1688. Rev. In center SOLD | AT THE | SPA HOUSE | BY. D. ARNOT | PROPRIETOR. Around, & BY INO. GRIFFITHS No. 27 ST. ALBAN’S STREET LONDON. Edge: Plain. Ruddy reflective surfaces with a small dark patch upper reverse. PCGS Population: 1 in 63BN, 3 finer (10/2019).

eh7rme4z9mh7.jpg
Scotland ND Halfpenny Conder Token, Angusshire, Dundee, Crooms Dragons-Sells MS62BN PCGS. $179
Obv. Two dragons holding shield of arms, DEI DONUM above, PRUDENTIA ET CANDORE below. Upper border of shield plain, neither (C)AN(DORE) nor (D)UN(DEE) joined. PAYABLE AT W. CROOMS HIGH STREET DUNDEE. Rev. SELLS | WHOLESALE | WOOLEN & LINEN | DRAPERY GOODS | WATCHES &c &c | CHEAP. Edge: Plain. This piece is rather dark, save in the centers, but strictly Mint State, and quite rare as a Scottish Conder token.

Comes with old-time collector’s envelope from Schwer Coins, Woodbridge, Suffolk. PCGS Population: 1 in 62BN, 0 finer (10/2019).

7ogqo2pbaj97.jpg
Great Britain 1796 One Penny Conder Token, Warwickshire, Wyon (noted as County by PCGS), Bouquet-Obelisk DH-25 MS64BN PCGS. $319
Obv. An obelisk partly covered in ivy within a circle of pellets, around CRESCIT IN IMMENSAM. Rev. Two cartouches, the larger containing a bouquet of flowers, the smaller T.W. cipher (Thomas Wyon). PROMISSORY PENNY around, date 1796 between cartouches. Edge: I PROMISE TO PAY ON DEMAND THE BEARER ONE PENNY. Gorgeous pastel rose and blue patina throughout, and almost certainly struck as a proof. PCGS Population: 2 in 64 BN, 1 finer (10/2019).

nr4ym3jnpode.jpg
Great Britain 1797 One Penny Conder Token, Gloucestershire, Gloucester, New County Gaol DH-10 MS64BN PCGS. $350
Obv. Gated building THE NEW COUNTY GAOL. Rev. Arms with CITY TOKEN flanking, ARMS OF GLOCESTER (sic), 1797 at bottom, R. KEMPSON FECIT in small letters nearby. PCGS Population: 2 in 64BN, 0 finer (10/2019). Comes with old-time collector’s envelope from Schwer Coins in Felixstowe, Suffolk, where this token is marked “Scarce.”

Background: Much like the Middlesex buildings of Kempson, this Gloucestershire series shows various building views. A new reverse die, lacking CITY TOKEN, with GLOUCESTER spelled properly, and signed OTTLEY in --script, dates from the 19th century.

z3e14dzdjzhg.jpg
Great Britain 1797 One Penny Conder Token, Gloucestershire, Gloucester, St. Nicholas Church DH-6 MS63BN PCGS. $295
Obv. View of church ST NICHOLAS CHURCH. Rev. Shield-arms with CITY TOKEN flanking, ARMS OF GLOCESTER (sic), 1797 at bottom, R. KEMPSON FECIT in small letters nearby. This piece is quite reflective with some moderate smoky patina right of the church spire. Comes with old-time collector’s envelope from Schwer Coins, Felixstowe, Suffolk. PCGS Population: 1 in 63BN, 0 finer (10/2019).

Background: Much like the Middlesex buildings of Kempson, this Gloucestershire series shows various building views. A new reverse die with GLOUCESTER spelled properly, lacking CITY TOKEN, and signed OTTLEY, dates from the 19th century.

4e1085boq90m.jpg
Great Britain 1794 Halfpenny Conder Token, Kent, Dover, Cinque Ports DH-16 MS65BN PCGS. $SALE PENDING
Obv. Bust right, THE R. HON. W. PITT LORD WARDEN CINQUE PORTS. Rev. Arms of Dover. 1794. CINQUE PORTS TOKEN PAYABLE AT DOVER : Edge: AT HORN’S LIBRARY. This lovely Gem offers beautiful blue patina with muted red remaining in the letter/device outlines. PCGS Population: 2 in 65BN, 0 finer, but this is by the nicer of the pair (both on CoinFacts) (10/2019).

Background: The confederation of Cinque Ports dates back further to Anglo-Saxon England, but the Norman French term “cinque ports” or “five ports” was in use by 1100. The towns of Dover, Hastings, Hythe, New Romney (later Rye), and Sandwich maintained ships in their harbors to come to the ready defense of the King. Today the term is strictly ceremonial in nature. William Pitt the Younger was Lord Warden from 1792 to 1806. Dover remains an active port today, but the others have fallen victim to time and tide. Literally.

m90xaojvjmug.jpg
Great Britain 1794 Halfpenny Conder Token, Sussex, Northiam, Squirrel-Unanimity DH-35 MS64BN PCGS. $279
Obv. EG cipher with a squirrel atop, around NORTHIAM HALFPENNY, date 1794 in exergue. Rev. Arms between palm and oak branches, around UNANIMITY IS THE BOND OF SOCIETY. Edge: PAYABLE AT G. GILBERTS NORTHIAM . X . X . X . X . This example boasts lovely prooflike blue-brown surfaces. PCGS Population: 2 in 64BN, 0 finer (10/2019).

s9vwv4kcl1za.jpg
Great Britain 1796 One Penny Conder Token, Middlesex, Kempson’s Guild Hall London DH-42 MS65BN PCGS. $SALE PENDING
Gorgeous prooflike fields on both sides are virtually unmarked. Tons of red remain; we think this deserves a RB designation. We suspect this was probably struck as a proof, given the high quality of strike and preservation, clearly preserved by some collector from the moment of issue. Obv. GUILD HALL LONDON MDCCXCVI (1796). Rev. Shield and intersecting fronds, LONDON PROMISSORY PENNY TOKEN with rosette. Edge I PROMISE TO PAY ON DEMAND THE BEARER ONE PENNY X. Part of Kempson’s Series of London Buildings. Sculptural details and top-notch surfaces! PCGS Population: 1 in 65 BN, 0 finer (10/2019).

And Last But Not Least
xz6kb1i9pvi4.jpg
A complete set of seven silver medals in original case (clasp slightly damaged), JOHN PINCHES LONDON hallmark inside case. All numbered “Set 85” with edge punches. $450

John Pinches Medallists Ltd. of London was a family of medallists, founded in 1840. Pinches was taken over by The Franklin Mint in 1969. I would estimate this set was struck sometime between 1937 or 1938 and 1952 (given the absence of a Queen Elizabeth II medal). According to a similar set sold on London Coins’ website from 2017, only 250 of these were produced. (Needless to say, the silver Conder token in the slab to the side in the main photo is not part of this set. And it’s sold, anyway!)

1. 1838 Young Queen Victoria Medal
size 45 mm
Obv. Very high relief Young Head facing left, signed D WYON
VICTORIA REGINA l-r, beading inside raised rim
Rev. BORN / MAY 24 1819 / ASCENDED THE THRONE / JUNE 20 1837 ? CROWNED / JUNE 23 1838
Edge on all: SET 85 JP Punch with Lion punch (Bull?) Mask punch (?) and M punch (?)
Lightly toned, hairlined on both sides from an old cleaning, prooflike fields and matte devices/letters. Gorgeous design.

2 .1897 Jubilee Head Victoria (60th Anniversary) Medal
size 35
Obv. Jubilee Head matron Victoria facing r. VICTORIA REGINA ET IMPERATRIX ornaments and circles at edge
Rev. Three shields reverse (3 lions couchant, harp with angel front, dragon with fleur de lis, all in center with Crown atop)
Around IN COMMEMORATION OF THE SIXTIETH YEAR OF HER MAJESTY’S REIGN
Edge: As #1
Matte devices, a bit dark and lightly toned, prooflike fields.

3. (No Date [1902]) Edward VII Coronation Medal
size 35
Obv. Edward facing r. in high relief tasseled robe with beaded crown EDWARDUS VII REX ET IMPERATOR
Rev. Same central design as no. 2 with IN COMMEMORATION OF THE CORONATION OF H.M. KING EDWARD VII
Edge: As #1
Gorgeous toning on prooflike surfaces.

4. 1911 George V and Mary Coronation Medal
size 38
Obv. Both facing left in high relief, deeply concave field
Rev. King steering a ship with three trumpeters in front (seraphs?) on ocean waves, MAY ITS COURSE BE PROSPEROUS
Edge: As #1
Beautiful light toning.

5. 1935 King George V and Queen Mary Medal
(5 and 7 reordered chronologically, different from the photograph)
size 35
Obv. Both facing left in royal robes KING GEORGE AND QUEEN MARY MAY 6TH 1935
Rev. Crown with orb and sceptre on cushion
TO COMMEMORATE / THE 25TH YEAR OF / THEIR MAJESTIES / REIGN / 1910 – 1935
Edge: As #1
Beautifully toned prooflike fields and matte, high-relief devices.

6. 1936 Edward VIII Medal
size 35
Obv. Facing right, around EDWARD VIII KING AND EMPEROR
Rev. Bead and reel ornament encircling rim, center ASCENDED / THE THRONE / JAN 20th 1936 / ABDICATED / DEC 10TH 1936 / IN FAVOUR OF / H.R.H. DUKE / OF YORK
PINCHES LONDON in tiny letters below
Edge: As #1
Blue-gold obv. patina, prooflike centers and matte devices.

7. 1937 King George V and Queen Elizabeth Medal size 35
(5 and 7 reordered chronologically, different from the photograph)
Obv. Both crowned, royal robes, facing left in high relief
PINCHES LONDON in tiny letters at bottom rim
Rev. View of Westminster, around CROWNED WESTMINSTER ABBEY MAY 12th 1937
Edge: As #1
Lightly golden-toned prooflike surfaces with minor hairlines and a small thin scrape rev. left field.

Many more photographs of this set are on our website. Please note that while we have endeavored to describe this set as accurately as possible, there are no returns on this item since these are raw medals and we cannot control what might be done to them (or what they might have been exposed to) once they leave our hands. A couple of the pieces have been cleaned, unfortunately, most notably the large Young Victoria medal, and are accordingly hairlined. But there is great eye appeal remaining on all, and the high relief designs are a delight to see.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Create an account or sign in to comment

You need to be a member in order to leave a comment

Create an account

Sign up for a new account in our community. It's easy!

Register a new account

Sign in

Already have an account? Sign in here.

Sign In Now
0