Look at the coins in your change. Even a handful of modern coins have plenty to tell.
This is especially the case today: a surprising number of ‘collectable’ special editions, such as the 2012 Olympic commemorative coins, have found their way into general circulation. Even normal in-circulation coins can be interesting to track down: do you remember the six UK coins that together become the royal shield?
And old coins – tarnished, battered, carrying the face of long dead king or queen – can come with intriguing stories even if they have a relatively modest cash value. You can come across these in the unlikeliest of places, but you can also buy mixed collections of ‘graded’ coins. These are coins are already sorted for quality and authenticity. They will be mostly of low value, but there are still plenty of interesting finds to be made when you buy them.
Occasionally, quite anomalous coins crop up. Thus it is still possible to find an Edwardian silver three pence piece, perhaps in a forgotten draw of curios. These were small and round and very different to the 12-sided brass ‘thruppenny’ used before decimalisation. A good condition example of the Edwardian 3d could be worth £2 or so. It won’t make you rich, but it’s interesting to contemplate the story of such individual pieces of the past.
UK pre-decimal coinage carries huge variety; once you start collecting you’ll quickly get used to the different monarchs and start connecting design, weight and material to different eras. Even pre-Victorian coins are relatively easy to find in auctions or collections for sale. A real connection with the past is quite achievable.
Whatever the starting point, there’s always a nudge of curiosity that gets you started. For older coins, it could easily be the smoothed profile of an historical figure, or a coin that commemorates a particular event in history – or even one with an important or interesting date. And perhaps today’s coins will tell their own story: what about coins minted in 2016, or those from 2020. Will tomorrow’s collectors recognise their significance?
In fact, it is the very personal link with the past – thinking about what the coin represents and who may have handled it – that makes a coin collecting such an engaging hobby and, over time, a real passion.
It is thought that the ancient Romans used tokens, albeit selectively. In Britain more recently, most commercial tokens were produced unofficially to stand in for small change, in times when the monarch and the Royal Mint did not produce enough coins to satisfy demand. Because of this, they were often tolerated by the government.
The first large scale occurrence in Britain seems to have been under King James I, when farthings (a quarter of a penny) were first produced in copper. Although minted with the King’s approval, they quickly came to be seen more as tokens than coins, because they could not be exchanged for their face value in silver.
In Britain, the 17th and 18th centuries were intermittently plagued by shortages of official coin. Often this was as a result of a lack of silver due to the cost of numerous wars, or a reluctance by the government to tackle the job of reforming the currency. It was not until after the Napoleonic wars that long lasting changes were made that took tokens out of widespread circulation.