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- From clement.schettino@axcelis.com Fri Jan 20 13:27:08 2006
Return-Path: <clement.schettino@axcelis.com> X-Sender: clement.schettino@axcelis.com X-Apparently-To: colonial-coins@yahoogroups.com Received: (qmail 1900 invoked from network); 20 Jan 2006 21:27:05 -0000 Received: from unknown (66.218.66.218) by m2.grp.scd.yahoo.com with QMQP; 20 Jan 2006 21:27:05 -0000 Received: from unknown (HELO n7a.bullet.scd.yahoo.com) (66.94.237.41) by mta3.grp.scd.yahoo.com with SMTP; 20 Jan 2006 21:27:05 -0000 Comment: DomainKeys? See http://antispam.yahoo.com/domainkeys Received: from [66.218.66.58] by n7.bullet.scd.yahoo.com with NNFMP; 20 Jan 2006 21:26:41 -0000 Received: from [66.218.66.71] by t7.bullet.scd.yahoo.com with NNFMP; 20 Jan 2006 21:26:41 -0000 Date: Fri, 20 Jan 2006 21:26:39 -0000 To: colonial-coins@yahoogroups.com Message-ID: <dqrkif+6jno@eGroups.com> In-Reply-To: <dqpf4c+6val@eGroups.com> User-Agent: eGroups-EW/0.82 MIME-Version: 1.0 Content-Type: text/plain; charset="ISO-8859-1" Content-Transfer-Encoding: quoted-printable X-Mailer: Yahoo Groups Message Poster X-Yahoo-Newman-Property: groups-compose X-Originating-IP: 66.94.237.41 X-eGroups-Msg-Info: 1:12:0:0 X-Yahoo-Post-IP: 12.146.8.100 From: "Clement V. Schettino (Clem)" <clement.schettino@axcelis.com> Subject: Re: How long did 1775 counterfeit halfpence circulate in London??? X-Yahoo-Group-Post: member; u=60887536; y=W8qt8BUmkF6VSpRCXcZ7IIhPLueRQhA7Wym4xAvdwaHbDuMw5g X-Yahoo-Profile: copperclem
Hey John,
I've been very busy here at work today and am just now getting around=20 to catching up on my egroups.
I'm going to add something that someone else my have already said but=20 I'm at work and need to read from the site, very cumbersome.
So, do the two counterfeit 1775 British 1/2d I have overstruck on two=20 different 1797 Condor tokens help shed light on the fact that they=20 certainly not only circulated well into the late eighteenth century=20 but were STILL obviously being struck at that time.
Clem
--- In colonial-coins@yahoogroups.com, "John Lorenzo" <johnmenc@o...>=20 wrote: > > Some students familiar with English copper regal coinage and the=20 > associated contemporary counterfeits have read something of this=20 > type of passage on Matthew Boulton: >=20 > His first coins, for Sumatra, which had been made in 1787 on old=20 > hand-operated coin presses he had got from a customer, were=20 probably=20 > not much better than the Royal Mint's erstwhile output. But by 1791=20 > he had solved the problem of achieving consistent size and weight.=20 > By 1794 he had introduced reeded and lettered edges, only recently=20 > copied by the Royal Mint with its =A31 and =A32 coins. Such edges made=20 > shaving instantly detectable and thus brought a halt to the=20 practice=20 > by preventing shaved coins from being returned into circulation.=20 > Another innovation in the same year was to inset the lettering=20 > around the edge of a coin into a raised border, which made the=20 > forger's life somewhat more difficult by improving the wearing=20 > properties of coins, since the raised border took the bulk of the=20 > wear. He also conceived of the idea of a gauge for detecting=20 whether=20 > the coin was made of the right metal. This gauge was made to the=20 > precise diameter and thickness of the coin, which was first passed=20 > through it and then weighed. If a coin which contained, say, too=20 > little gold, passed through the gauge its weight would be short;,=20 > whilst if its weight were correct it would be too big to pass=20 > through the gauge. By 1799 he had devised a method of producing=20 > coins with diagonal reeding on the edge, which is extremely=20 > difficult to counterfeit. Two centuries later, the Royal Mint has=20 > yet to catch up. He also introduced the practice, still followed=20 > with regard to the British coinage, of making the weight of copper=20 > coins proportional to their value, 2d pieces weighing 2ozs, 1d=20 > pieces 1oz, and so on. This enables the value of a bagful of change=20 > to be determined simply by weighing it. The standards Boulton set=20 > for coin size and weight remained in force until decimalisation=20 over=20 > 170 years later. > Just posting an interesting piece in my previous post illustrating=20 a=20 > 1775 English halfpence contemporary counterfeit counterstamped with=20 > the Samuel Davis of London counterstamp. Brunk believes this=20 > merchant operated in London between 1808-1822 and he gives this=20 > piece his attribution number of #51265 due to the first of two=20 types=20 > of spelling of the word HOUNDSDITCH in the counterstamp. > My point - it seems contemporary counterfeits were circulating=20 > somewhat WELL PAST the so-called end of the counterfeit era due to=20 > Boulton coinage of the late 1790's. This piece CERTAINLY confirms=20 > this fact. Can not recall too many other pieces showing similar=20 > proof. Mr. Albany, Dave P. or Clem ... anything ...??? >
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