Victorian Cash Still Legal Today!

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  • Опубликовано: 1 окт 2024

Комментарии • 1,6 тыс.

  • @nathangreer8219
    @nathangreer8219 Год назад +1593

    My teen daughter was working at a convenience store here in the US, when some kids came in on bikes and purchased candy and soda with Morgan silver dollars. Yeah, I suspect they raided mom and dad's coin collection..... she did, of course, put here own dollars in the till and kept the coins. She would have gladly given them back had the parents come in with the guilty parties to confess the crime. They never did.

    • @Heike--
      @Heike-- Год назад

      What blithering idiots. How do kids not know what money looks like, or that it's worth more? Jesus that's stupid. Even for kids.

    • @JamesThomas-gg6il
      @JamesThomas-gg6il Год назад +75

      Wow, good kid you have there.

    • @TheBcoolGuy
      @TheBcoolGuy Год назад +98

      You've raised her well! But how much can she deadlift? 😎

    • @Americanpatriot-zo2tk
      @Americanpatriot-zo2tk Год назад +26

      Well today silver is worth about more or less $25 an ounce.

    • @jameswolf133
      @jameswolf133 Год назад +54

      When I worked in a bookstore, I opened a roll of dimes to find a number of Mercury dimes. Another clerk and I replaced those dimes with cash from our pockets.

  • @delbertstringbreaker7686
    @delbertstringbreaker7686 Год назад +146

    Old Gold Sovereigns are also legal tender in the UK due to their £1 face value. In theory, you can use the Sovereign to purchase goods up to £1 in value, but the gold content of the coin is worth far more. Its legal tender status is important for gold investors as it deems any profits made from Sovereigns as tax-free.

    • @rattmcpossum
      @rattmcpossum Год назад +1

      Does that count with those coins that are gold, but are technically legal tender in some strange island that also has “pounds” as currency??

    • @InappropriateShorts
      @InappropriateShorts Год назад

      @@rattmcpossum yes as well as the one that has “dollars” for currency

    • @Sundevil17
      @Sundevil17 Год назад

      I miss the days when pieces of six were still considered to be legal tender. Arrrrgggggghhhhh😂😖🏴‍☠️

  • @eentoffenaam
    @eentoffenaam Год назад +234

    Fun fact: the Dutch guilder, used in The Netherlands until the Euro came in our lives, was also known as Florijn, or Florin. Hence the abbreviation FL for the Dutch guilder in the old days….

    • @Sarnarath
      @Sarnarath Год назад +27

      And the Dutch Rijksdaalder means ''imperial dollar'' and was the basis for the American dollar.

    • @MusicJunky3
      @MusicJunky3 Год назад +1

      I was about to ...

    • @highpath4776
      @highpath4776 Год назад +7

      @@Sarnarath Dollar argueably from Thaler/ Thale / To Tally.

    • @highpath4776
      @highpath4776 Год назад

      Which country had a Florint ( was that Hungary ?)

    • @gentblue
      @gentblue Год назад +8

      ​@@highpath4776 Hungary still uses Florins. The Scandinavian countries use Kronas (Crowns) and many former British Empire countries use shillings.

  • @paulkoza8652
    @paulkoza8652 Год назад +78

    I'll never forget the time I put a dime into a vending machine and the machine keep spitting it out. I looked at it after 3 tries and found out it was a silver dime. The machine thought it was a slug because silver weighs more than the alloys used in modern coins.

    • @mattcolver1
      @mattcolver1 Год назад +3

      What's interesting about the dime is that it really doesn't say on it how much it's worth. It says one dime. It really should say ten cents. All other coins show their value in cents or in the case of the quarter it says one quarter dollar. But one dime, what's that?

    • @seed_drill7135
      @seed_drill7135 Год назад +1

      I think it's actually lighter, but same principle.

    • @cameleopard42
      @cameleopard42 Год назад

      ​@@mattcolver1 What's a cent, really? Shouldn't all the coins give their values directly in dollars like the quarter? Or maybe the quarter and all the bills should have their values in cents. Just because dime is less commonly used doesn't make it any less valid of a unit.

    • @miguelmartins9706
      @miguelmartins9706 Год назад +1

      @@cameleopard42 cent means one hundredth bro

    • @cameleopard42
      @cameleopard42 Год назад

      @@miguelmartins9706 And dime means one tenth. It was a rhetorical question.

  • @brick6347
    @brick6347 Год назад +429

    The older coins were made of silver, though much less in post WW1 ones and none after 1947. My great uncle was a meter reader in the 40s, and paid for his house swapping the silver coins he took out with base metal ones. A 1920-1947 shilling is worth about £1.25 in silver.

    • @danjames5552
      @danjames5552 Год назад +39

      They lowered the silver content in 1920 from 925 to 50% , so the early ones before 1920 had more silver in them . Smart move by your uncle.

    • @grahvis
      @grahvis Год назад +13

      When I was a kid, coins and charms were put in the Christmas puddings, if you found one, it meant good luck though they had to be kept for the next year,.
      They would have to be the early silver ones.

    • @bendewet1057
      @bendewet1057 Год назад +16

      @@grahvis , Yes, and our Mother did the same here in South Africa.
      However,
      She used the old Three Penny Coin, commonly known as a Tiekie, and so our Christmas Pud was called the Tickey Pudding!

    • @1986tessie
      @1986tessie Год назад +9

      In Australia we had 92.5% silver in our coins until 1946 then they devalued our currency to 50% until 1965. In 1966 50c coins had 80% silver but after that nothing. Inflation is great.😂😂😂😂😂😂

    • @d.l.hemmingway3758
      @d.l.hemmingway3758 Год назад +11

      It sounds like Brittain did the same thing America did, but we were always Decimal. We went from solid 90% silver for dimes through dollars in 1964 and no silver sometime in the 1970s. Pennies here are almost brass pieces with far more zinc than copper and don't even go on about the base metals in the former silver coins. If I get anymore pre-1964 coins in my change I am saving it for the bullion value and keeping it for after the collapse of the Dollar.

  • @blackplatypus6755
    @blackplatypus6755 Год назад +43

    Being born in Australia in '64 two years before the decimal system came in and as a kid I used to always get sixpences, shillings and florins in my lunch money/change etc. I still remember in the mid-seventies using the old pennies to buy sweets. By the late seventies I got into coin collecting so any I came across went straight to my collection and not the local shop.

  • @mityace
    @mityace Год назад +135

    US Coin sizes have been unchanged for decades. However, you don't see quarter and half dollar coins from 1964 or before very often. AFAIK, they are still legal tender but they are nearly pure silver and, hence, for the last 50 plus years they are worth more than their face value on silver content alone.

    • @tad27612
      @tad27612 Год назад +22

      The US has never demonetized coins or bills. Silver certificates can no longer be demanded in silver, but they can be for the face value of the bill.

    • @johnanon6938
      @johnanon6938 Год назад +10

      Yes very true and still legal tender. Afterwards some enterprising Americans visit Canada to buy those silver coins and return to sell at the higher silver value. Canadian coins are same size & face value but Canada stopped making any circulation coins out of nearly pure silver around 1967-69.

    • @hughmungus1767
      @hughmungus1767 Год назад +4

      Canadian coins have the same denominations as their American counterparts, namely 5 cents, 10 cents, and 25 cents but have different values given the ever-changing exchange rates between the Canadian and American dollars. Canadian coins are also made of different metals than their American counterparts. For example, I tried to use a Canadian quarter in an American phone booth 30-odd years ago and my coin just fell straight into the "rejected" slot; apparently the American coin slot mechanism detects the difference in metals. Canada got rid of its penny a few years back and I haven't seen a 50 cent piece in many decades although I expect they're still legal tender. Our $1 and $2 bank notes were replaced by coins some years back.

    • @Heike--
      @Heike-- Год назад +7

      Coin collectors on RUclips get rolls of coins from banks all the time and go through them on camera. They find silver coinage, tons of wheat pennies, the even older Indian head pennies, and all kinds of foreign coins. All still in circulation, fresh from the bank.

    • @highpath4776
      @highpath4776 Год назад

      @@Heike-- I dont watch the US collectors but are the Indian Head ones worth anything ?

  • @Numischannel
    @Numischannel Год назад +89

    Welcome to the world of numismatics, Mark! I collected British pre-decimals since my early childhood, although in my teens I specialised in ancient coins... but I still keep my entire pre-decimal collection! The double florin is still one of my favorite pre-decimals I have a nice 1887 example, quite a unique coin since it was a short lived denomination or, as we numismatist call them - 'a miscellaneous' denomination.

    • @martinphilip8998
      @martinphilip8998 Год назад +1

      I was 16 and my family was living in England in 1971, the year of conversion. I loved those coins. The pennies were huge and my neighborhood mates smashed them on the railway tracks. I had saved up an entire cigar box of thrup ‘n bits but ny mother wouldn’t let me bring them home.

    • @Numischannel
      @Numischannel Год назад

      @@martinphilip8998 And the ha'penny was good to play on the shovel board, a game that was called 'shove ha'penny'... I made myself a wooden board to play with my friends when I was a kid back in the '80s 😄

    • @martinphilip8998
      @martinphilip8998 Год назад

      @@Numischannel I bought a pair of Churchill crowns from my neighbor girlfriend.-. One late night I went to a Pakistani restaurant. I ordered medium spicy and got a big blister on my palette. The blister is gone but I still have the silver 1945 shilling they gave me in my change. British coins and stamps will always hold my interest. If I was rich, I’d love to own coins from the Tudor period.

    • @Numischannel
      @Numischannel Год назад

      @@martinphilip8998 I have a few, both English and Irish, all silver, though, no gold

    • @JonathanAuburn
      @JonathanAuburn Год назад +1

      As interest would have it, up here in the States we had a very similar piece - like the Double Florin it was one-fifth of the full currency unit (in our case, twenty cents), and again like the Double Florin it only stuck around for a few years (was only minted for circulation in 1875 and 1876). Miscellaneous indeed.

  • @InvestmentJoy
    @InvestmentJoy Год назад +103

    I smell a great RUclips video upcoming 'living in London by spending only Victorian currency'.
    You could do the same here in the states , almost no us legal tender has been ended, only $5000 and higher bills have been de monetized. Our $1,000 bills are still very much legal. Along with half pennies and 20c pieces.

    • @colejosephalexanderkashay683
      @colejosephalexanderkashay683 Год назад +1

      What is the rarest coin you have found whilst running many coin operated businesses

    • @Whatisthisstupidfinghandle
      @Whatisthisstupidfinghandle Год назад +5

      I can see the 7-11 clerk going mental with a half penny lol

    • @dubious_potat4587
      @dubious_potat4587 Год назад

      @@Whatisthisstupidfinghandle your total is 10.76
      *dumps a trash bag full of halfpennies*

    • @blindleader42
      @blindleader42 Год назад +8

      @@Whatisthisstupidfinghandle It's much worse than that. Try giving a Sacagawea or Susan B Anthony to a Millennial or Zoomer clerk.

    • @chemistryofquestionablequa6252
      @chemistryofquestionablequa6252 Год назад +12

      ​@@blindleader42 even $2 bills. There are videos of cashiers calling the police over them here on RUclips.

  • @thomasa7175
    @thomasa7175 Год назад +18

    Imagine living in the Dominion of Newfoundland with 3 recognized types of Currency ; British , Canadian ,and Newfoundland. Many Canadian Provinces still accepted British currency well into the 1890's, with some Provinces holding out until the early 1900's.

  • @superjonboy873
    @superjonboy873 Год назад +91

    Mark, your videos are always money in the bank!

    • @rtqii
      @rtqii Год назад +6

      HA - True!!

    • @-.Steven
      @-.Steven Год назад +1

      Indeed! Great comment! 😄

  • @dcarbs2979
    @dcarbs2979 Год назад +208

    In the UK, "Legal Tender" doesn't merely mean the ability to spend it as currency over the counter. It means it has value towards a debt and the creditor cannot refuse it as payment for court judgements in their favour.

    • @unscentednapalm8547
      @unscentednapalm8547 Год назад +14

      Exactly this. Way to keep pedaling the 'legal tender you have to take it' in shops myth. But what do we expect from this guy's poorly researched 'history' videos.

    • @georgehh2574
      @georgehh2574 Год назад +16

      ​@@unscentednapalm8547 Poorly researched? Are you new here?

    • @pickle4422
      @pickle4422 Год назад +14

      @@unscentednapalm8547 Didn't you just agree with someone who was agreeing with Mark that it is "Legal Tender", then proceed to say that "Legal Tender" is a myth?

    • @Geldahar
      @Geldahar Год назад +19

      @@unscentednapalm8547 No where in this video did Mark say that vendors "HAVE TO TAKE IT". He never said it once you dunce.

    • @Geldahar
      @Geldahar Год назад

      @@unscentednapalm8547 This guy makes some of the most highly curated and expertly analyzed history content on youtube and here you are too dumb to even comprehend what you heard from a video you just watched.

  • @scottg2946
    @scottg2946 Год назад +179

    As an American (who's been to the UK quite a few times), most of this is unfamiliar to me, but this is a fascinating segment about such an obscure topic. Well done sir!

    • @highpath4776
      @highpath4776 Год назад +2

      ask Mark nicely, he might explain to us nickels/dimes and so on. For the UK there is a lot of slang for both mulitiples of a pound(Quid) including old counting (Score for 20 and so) and lower coinage, (Tanner/Joey come to mind)

    • @skydiverclassc2031
      @skydiverclassc2031 Год назад +3

      @@highpath4776 I was in New Zealand in 1984, and mistakenly referred to their 10 cent piece as a dime. The shopkeeper kindly corrected me, but that was probably a dead giveaway as to who's a tourist...

    • @barrygower6733
      @barrygower6733 Год назад +5

      My mum was a clippie on the 19 bus and used to tell me that American tourists were totally bewildered when paying their fare, holding out a handful of pennies, ha’pennies, tanners, bobs, thruppenny bits, half-crowns and florins, telling her to take what she wanted.

    • @scottg2946
      @scottg2946 Год назад +3

      @@barrygower6733 My first trip to the UK as a 16 year old in 1980, that was totally me: grab a pocket full of these weird and wonderful coins and let the person take what they needed.

    • @borderlands6606
      @borderlands6606 Год назад +3

      @@barrygower6733 1960s school exercise books had imperial measures on the back cover. Avoirdupois weights, Troy weights for gold, silver and jewels, long measures (fathoms, poles, furlongs), cloth (nails and quarters), heaped measures (bushels, sacks, chaldrons), dry measures (noggins, pecks), and so on. Our dog-eared text books had tests based on some of these, and every conversion had a different multiple and none of them were 10!

  • @rodchallis8031
    @rodchallis8031 Год назад +45

    Canadian coins were made of silver until 1968, when they were replaced by nickel alloys. As the change happened, my Dad let me siphon the silver coins from his pockets. I managed to find a few Edward VII coins still in circulation, though so worn as not to be of much value collection wise. My first visit to England was just after the change to the decimal system. A great relief since my Mother had tried to explain to me the old system and I wanted no part of that. My cousin worked for the post office, and one of the things he did was service pay phones. Frequently, people tried to file down big old pennies (again, one was Edward VII) to 10p size so they could be used in the pay phones-- and of course they'd more often than not get stuck.

    • @johnlennox-pe2nq
      @johnlennox-pe2nq Год назад +2

      dad did this for the leccy meter - filing down a washer on the doorstep until midnight so we could watch the last minutes of a Hammer dracula film

    • @alexcholagh8330
      @alexcholagh8330 Год назад

      Canada didn't really change there coins except the penny ( circa 2013)1 dollar bill (1986) and 2 dollar bill (1996). We Americans get pennies dimes nickels quarters 1 dollars and very very rarely half dollars and 2 dollars.

    • @cwf1701
      @cwf1701 7 месяцев назад +1

      @@alexcholagh8330 And more so in places near the border (ie Detroit). Growing up, i would often get pennies with QE2 alongside the wheat and Memorial pennies.

    • @alexcholagh8330
      @alexcholagh8330 7 месяцев назад

      @@cwf1701 I used to get alot of Canadians in port Huron/fort Gratiot I was 10 minutes away from the sarnia border and many of customers are Canadians and they tip well

  • @eddiewillers1
    @eddiewillers1 Год назад +37

    I have pre-decimal one penny coins minted in the reigns of Victoria, Edward VII, George V, George VI, and Elizabeth II - a fascinating march through history.

    • @AtheistOrphan
      @AtheistOrphan Год назад

      Indeed. Last year I bought a coin set from the year I was born (1965).

    • @simoncampbell-smith6745
      @simoncampbell-smith6745 Год назад +3

      You can even do that with decimal coins. They are marked with the year. Take a look at remember the history the older ones have been through. Every year has a story and the coins have been there to see them. 1982 Falklands War, 1977 Queen's Silver Jubilee, 1990 and 1991 First Gulf war and so on. Although new coins do tend to arrive in circulation later in the year. Take some change out, look at the dates and think of the history they have seen.

    • @filmaker256
      @filmaker256 Год назад +4

      Cash must remain!

  • @robg5958
    @robg5958 Год назад +45

    I remember D day for decimal currency very well. I was aged eight at the time. At school we were given plastic decimal coins to familiarize ourselves with the new denominations etc. My mother never got used to decimal and would always need me to convert prices to what she described as, " real money."

    • @davidlyon1899
      @davidlyon1899 Год назад +3

      I'm with your mum on this. Could never under stand how a sixpence was only worth 2 and a half pence.

    • @highpath4776
      @highpath4776 Год назад +2

      mum and dad were littlewoods pools collectors so had to learn. Being a change (sic) to decimal the new currency maths was a doddle to learn )(appart from we still had Oz to Lb to Cwt multiples to learn for doing adding up of some prices)

    • @arthurcrown3063
      @arthurcrown3063 Год назад +3

      I still think of it as "real money". The decimal stuff is "Mickey Mouse money".

    • @Xezlec
      @Xezlec Год назад

      @@davidlyon1899 You really can't understand it? Are you serious?

    • @davidlyon1899
      @davidlyon1899 Год назад

      @@Xezlec I was 6 years old.

  • @allenpinnix5241
    @allenpinnix5241 Год назад +21

    Here in the US I keep using coins and paper bank notes too -- I want as little to do with digital currency as possible! Thanks for another interesting post Dr. Felton!

    • @AndyJarman
      @AndyJarman Год назад

      I think you have twigged what the real reason for this video is. Triggernometry's bank account has been closed for 'undisclosed' reasons by their bank, and at least half the channels I watch have recently been censored, demonetised or shadow banned for wrong think.
      This video is a close as Mark dare get to protesting this insidious creep towards central digital currency and the Social Credit System used to control the behaviour and beliefs of a people by its government.

  • @markfurlong3094
    @markfurlong3094 Год назад +241

    I heartily agree, Dr. Felton...the headlong rush to eliminate the use of physical money is unsettling. Just this week here in America talk has begun about a "digital dollar" replacing our currency, which could literally be "turned off" by banks or the government for any number of reasons. Thank you for yet another engaging post and for your usual excellence.

    • @AndyJarman
      @AndyJarman Год назад

      Well spotted - for why else would this channel War Stories be producing a video about coins.
      Social credit is already being applied to You Tube channels by demonetisation and shadow banning.
      YT channel Triggernometry has had its bank account closed by Tide bank for undisclosed reasons.

    • @bukster1
      @bukster1 Год назад

      The rush to get rid of cash is often dismissed as a 'conspiracy theory'. However, it's hardly a conspiracy when it's happening quite openly. I had predicted the Queen's death might be used as an opportunity to get rid of cash. It hasn't happened, but we are still heading that way.

    • @1977ajax
      @1977ajax Год назад +29

      The bank or govt. can 'turn off' your money whenever they like anyway, though no point making it easier for them by agreeing to anything they want to do.

    • @thesteelrodent1796
      @thesteelrodent1796 Год назад +7

      the main reason for getting rid of cash is to retain the value. Every time you print money (or technically, put it into circulation) you reduce the value of each coin/note. If you put more cash into circulation than it is taken out, the money becomes devaluated, and reversely, if more is taken out of circulation than is put back in, the value increases. By removing cash the value becomes effectively fixed - more or less, as the value depends somewhat on what it's based on in the first place. You also remove the ability to speculate in cash trade, forging money becomes almost impossible, and you incidentially also save money by not having all the extra processes to deal with cash. Only you then create a bunch of other problems that come along with doing everything digitally, like how do you prevent the government from magically create more money to pay for stuff?

    • @thegingercollector3361
      @thegingercollector3361 Год назад +19

      It’s getting beyond a joke how many places here in the UK don’t want cash now, and I don’t think covid has helped. I was at my university the other week and left my wallet at home but I always have some change in my bag, I just wanted to buy a drink for £1, they refused to take it and said just have the drink! Generous but what a fuss about accepting a piece of legal tender for payment!

  • @KenR1800
    @KenR1800 Год назад +44

    Being in the USA, all coins and bills issued by the Federal Government are still legal tender. Although like the Double Florin you mention, the value in both materials and collector value far exceed the face value. (I used to work as both a bank teller and a cashier at a store, and would happily buy any pre 1965 silver coins that came my way.) As for the coin not having a denomination, in the US we had a similar problem. The 1883 Liberty Head nickel (5 cent coin) was not marked with the word "Cents", it just had a Roman Numeral V on the back. The problem was the coin was similar in size to the 5 Dollar gold coin circulating at the same time. So it didn't take long for some "enterprising" individuals to gold plate their nickels and pass them off as $5.00 coins. Needless to say the 1884 and beyond versions of the coins had the word "Cents" added.

    • @hughmungus1767
      @hughmungus1767 Год назад +2

      I've always been confused about an American expression: "Don't take any wooden nickels". Does this indicate that America actually made coins out of wood at some point or, more likely, that scheming individuals once counterfeited legal nickels with wooden ones?

    • @YoloBagels
      @YoloBagels Год назад +11

      ​@Hugh Mungus In the early 20th century it was custom for stores and businesses to make "wooden nickels", which were large size tokens essentially doubling as business cards. Sometimes they would include a cash value (usually 5c) redeemable in the store/merchant being advertised.

    • @TroyDowVanZandt
      @TroyDowVanZandt Год назад +1

      Are you implying that the US government at the time had more money than cents?

    • @Heike--
      @Heike-- Год назад +1

      @@hughmungus1767 Wooden nickels were a hoary old joke, stores would pass them out as souvenirs.

    • @highpath4776
      @highpath4776 Год назад +1

      @@Heike-- there is a whole load of interesting things about trade tokens (often given as change as no legal requirement to give change for overtendering) or employer payment tokens (Illegal since I am not sure when - used to be common in the mining and railroad construction industries, and such tokens could only be spent in employer owned shops and pubs)

  • @felixsteiner6479
    @felixsteiner6479 Год назад +13

    Many years ago I was behind a kid in a comic book store who was trying to buy things with Morgan dollars amongst other silver coins at face value. The kid at the register wouldn't accept them. I immediately bought all of his coins at twice the face value. He was very happy. I was even happier!

  • @davidharing6475
    @davidharing6475 Год назад +35

    Fun fact, any US Dollar coin or bill ever made and not in too bad of shape is also still totally legal tender as the Dollar was never revalued or taken out of circulation. One of the few currencies in existence with this quirk.

    • @ktipuss
      @ktipuss Год назад +4

      I have a 1935 Silver Certificate Five Dollar Bill. A coin dealer said that they are still relatively common.

    • @OPIXdotWORLD
      @OPIXdotWORLD Год назад +2

      @@ktipuss i have one too... ps KEEP CASH or we will lose freedom...

    • @uncletiggermclaren7592
      @uncletiggermclaren7592 Год назад

      @@OPIXdotWORLD Some freedoms are worthless. Others you lost long ago and they have made no difference to your life and never could in most cases.
      Example, you can not leave the USA without a Passport. If you can't get issued one, a boarder guard will say "Halt" and ( in the USA. The rest of us are not pathologically fond of guns so it PROBABLY wouldn't happen here, they would just taze me if I tried it ) then shoot to kill if you keep walking. Or swimming. Or sailing. Or flying.
      :\

    • @seed_drill7135
      @seed_drill7135 Год назад

      Not sure about gold coins, as private ownership of gold was banned from 1933 until Nixon took us off the gold standard. Not that anyone's about to turn down a double eagle on a $20 purchase!

    • @seed_drill7135
      @seed_drill7135 Год назад

      Even size change of our change didn't matter. The huge Ike dollar, barely larger than a quarter Susan B. Anthony and the brass Sacagawea and presidential series dollars are all worth the same. And in the 1850's you had large cents and standard size pennies circulating at the same time. It became quite confusing when they tried to introduce a .02 coin the same size as the old large cents that had just been discontinued a few years prior.

  • @PitFriend1
    @PitFriend1 Год назад +22

    I still remember when a coworker thought a customer was trying to pass a counterfeit $5 bill when it was just an old silver certificate. They’re still legal tender but you just can’t get silver for them anymore.

    • @tiggytheimpaler5483
      @tiggytheimpaler5483 Год назад +1

      I remember that when I was working at McDonald's in 2003 and I was the only one there who knew what a silver cert was. Fortunately I told the kid that he should keep that cert because it was worth quite a bit being from the depression era one from the San Francisco mint

    • @fierylightning3422
      @fierylightning3422 Год назад +4

      not being able to retrieve their silver from that certificate is just straight up theft...

    • @SuperFranzs
      @SuperFranzs Год назад

      @@fierylightning3422 Fiat currency itself is theft.

    • @calebfuller4713
      @calebfuller4713 Год назад +1

      @@fierylightning3422 Isn't it just? Straight up breaking a legal written and signed contract! (Which is what that paper was)

  • @gern7535
    @gern7535 Год назад +6

    In Atlanta Georgia if you use the city bus and rail system and buy your pass from a vending machine you will receive Sacagawea dollar coins as change if you use a larger bill to buy your pass. The Sacagawea is legal tender in the US but because it's rare some establishments refuse to take them and many places have young people working there that have no idea what it is. A similar problem is experienced when using a two dollar bill. It's been in circulation for ages but most people have no idea what it is or if it's legal. But it's worth two dollars. Of course you can't buy hardly anything for two dollars anymore.

  • @scottbosecker3732
    @scottbosecker3732 Год назад +8

    Maybe somewhat related... In the early 1980's I was a Naval Aviator in the US Navy. While deployed to the Mediterranean, using some leave, I met my wife in London for a few days. After this visit I had some leftover British money which included a 1 pound note in excellent condition, I squrreled this bit of currency away in a drawer with all my other money from around the world.
    In the middle 90's I was now a Delta Airlines L-1011 co-pilot and had a layover in Brighton. I went to a pub with some crewmembers for a pint. I had brought along the 1-pound note and I handed it to the man behind the bar to help pay for my adult beverage. He looked at it and said that he couldn't take it as payment as it had been replaced by a coin but I could exchange it at a bank. He then looked at the note again and verbally expressed some minor admiration at the fine condition it was in. HA!

    • @highpath4776
      @highpath4776 Год назад +2

      he should have kept it, they go to collectors for £1.25+

    • @MarkFeltonProductions
      @MarkFeltonProductions  Год назад +4

      I kept the last one I received. Quite miss them.

  • @elvenkind6072
    @elvenkind6072 Год назад +7

    Hmm, Dr. Felton just don't run out of things to educate the public about. It's a bit like the Fountain of Youth, only with knowledge. 🙂

    • @nullakjg767
      @nullakjg767 Год назад

      Maybe next week he can make a video about how all the pubs from the 1600s also still are allowed to operate in england. You basically have endless content when talking about things that DIDNT change.

  • @timeflysintheshop
    @timeflysintheshop Год назад +21

    Very cool! This reminds me of the US $2 bill which is still made every five or so years, but is relatively uncommon in everyday use. I heard a story of a man who thought it would be cool to make a purchase with two dollar bills only to have the store clerk think he was trying to use fake money and call the police. Then even the policeman thought it was fake money and arrested the man. While at the police station, the secret service (who has authority over money issues) was called in to examine the "fake" money and of course told them it was real and that $2 bills are legal tender! I keep one in my wallet! They made a large printing of them in our bicentennial year 1976 (the year I was born) and you still find the 1976 ones in circulation as often as any of the newer printed ones. 😁👍

    • @billywalker9223
      @billywalker9223 Год назад +1

      I have Silver Certificate $2 bills. They've been printed for years.

    • @goofyroofy
      @goofyroofy Год назад +1

      I had a few of those on a trip to the US @ then, my dad, who was american, told me they were bad luck, that why theyre not in wider circulation.

    • @timeflysintheshop
      @timeflysintheshop Год назад +2

      @@goofyroofy I am American, I never heard anyone say they were bad luck. I keep one in my wallet, I don't think it has given me any bad luck. Its a big country, maybe the bad luck thing is regional. 😁😉

    • @goofyroofy
      @goofyroofy Год назад +1

      @@timeflysintheshop Yeah my dad used to always say that he was in the northeast US and later in the service so dont know from where he picked that up, but was quite insistent on it as to why they wernt in wide circulation in the US, so im guessing is a northeast thing.

    • @foamer443
      @foamer443 Год назад

      Canadian here, but was not the original US 2$ bill the Susan B. Anthony imprint? I can recall reading about some sort of huge controversy about her, the design or just the fact there was a woman on the bill.
      As for passing one off, I can recall 'back in the day' friends who would be in the US, and I don't know about now but way back Canadian money would be accepted at least in some parts depending the exchange. These folk would pass Canadian Tire money (it's a thing) off as regular Canadian legal currency, which of course it is not.

  • @wrichard11
    @wrichard11 Год назад +6

    Sixpences were kept because London Transport had so many fares with sixpence and so many automatic machines taking them it would be impossible for LT to function without them.

  • @monarchist1838
    @monarchist1838 Год назад +3

    Another pre-decimal coin that predates the double florin that remains legal tender as of 2023 is the five shilling crown. It survived decimal day being worth 25 new pence. In fact, it was succeeded by new decimal crowns which were minted for commemorative purposes until 1981. The original crowns were struck till 1965, millions in base metal so they are more practical to spend. You could wind up with a crown in your change from 1818 with George III.

  • @dreamingflurry2729
    @dreamingflurry2729 Год назад +8

    Hm...as a guy who has a (small) coin collection himself, I believe that this coin (the double Florin) is probably worth something so a shopkeeper not accepting it would be a fool!
    EDIT: Well, Doc! Nailed it...didn't know the value but 100 British pounds is not that insignificant, compared to the face value :)

  • @trevorhoward2254
    @trevorhoward2254 Год назад +4

    I loved 'old money' as we used to call it. The Farthings - a quarter of an old penny, about an eighth of today's penny - went out of use in 1960, the year before I was born. But there was still the Ha'penny (half penny) and Penny, It wasn't at all unusual to have either with Queen Victoria's head on them.
    Then there was the Thruppenny (three penny) bit, the Sixpence Piece (called coloquially a tanner), the Shilling (a Bob), the Two Shillings (a two bob bit) and the Half Crown , worth two Shillings and Six Pence.
    The only name I remember for the Half Crown was Half A Dollar, which came, I believe, from the war when a dollar was, give or take, worth five shillings.A few older people have told me it wasn't unusual for kids to beg from American GIs for "half a Dollar".
    My favourite piece of old money was the Ten Bob (ten shillings) Note which was replaced with the 50p coin. It was printed in beautiful, very dark red ink. Ten Bob was far more money than I ever had, My pocket money when decimal currency came in was two Shillings (10p). Then once when, aged about eight or nine, I found one outside a shop. Good boy that I was, I took it to the shop keeper. That night an old chap, a stranger, came to the house. He'd lost the ten bob note and had been given it back by the shop keeper. He gave it to me as a reward for my honesty.
    I slept with it under my pillow then next day, my Mom opened a Post Office savings account for me with it. I still have the account but I would rather have the ten Bob Note.

  • @ctaber2011
    @ctaber2011 Год назад +10

    I'm a big coin collector and i love the Double Florins.

  • @borderlands6606
    @borderlands6606 Год назад +8

    As a pre-decimal kid, there were some very old coins in circulation. Many of these made their way into our hands in the run up to bonfire night, when adults raided their piggy banks in penny-for-the-guy collections. Some were worn smooth by use, with barely discernible dates. Others were clear and had been lost from circulation for years. Even as a kid I wondered how many hands the old ha'pennies, pennies, thruppeny bits and tanners had passed through.

  • @TheRealPuppycat
    @TheRealPuppycat Год назад +7

    Farthing 1/48 s
    Ha'penny 1/24 s
    Penny Thrupennce 1/4 s
    Groat 1/3s
    Sixpence 1/2 s
    Shilling 1 s
    Florence 2 s
    Half Crown 2 1/2 s
    Full crown 5 s
    My Aunt ( Who is German ) Lived in Ireland for a Few years before the switch to decimal. She being a Mathematician told me about the old system

    • @envitech02
      @envitech02 Год назад

      This is a super crazy system! Thank God for the French who invented the metric system!

    • @bazzatheblue
      @bazzatheblue Год назад +2

      @@envitech02 those who used the system would disagree including John Lennon among others.

    • @nathangreer8219
      @nathangreer8219 Год назад +1

      Neat. These are words we in the US hear in nursery rhymes and old Victorian literature, but have no idea what they are.

    • @gbcb8853
      @gbcb8853 Год назад +1

      @@envitech02 but it enabled a great flexibility in counting to different bases. Base 12 for pence, base 20 for shillings, base 10 for pounds, base 2 for half pennies, base 4 for farthings, base 8 for half crowns and so on.
      Everyone else was stuck in base 10. Nowadays it’s binary - either you have money , or you don’t.

    • @honker3282
      @honker3282 Год назад +2

      I really miss the simplicity of the old system.

  • @joshweinstein5345
    @joshweinstein5345 Год назад +9

    This story is insanely delightful, especially given that it's all the result of someone's oversight years ago. While I love your WWII and other wartime videos, Dr. Felton, I do hope you'll continue to branch out into these other little known historical areas. Just as you time-traveled by using old coins, your videos help us time travel and understand history all the more.

  • @JamesJohnson-sl3ui
    @JamesJohnson-sl3ui Год назад +7

    Love the episodes about money. Please do more

  • @maneco64
    @maneco64 Год назад

    I have a couple of double florins or barmaid's ruin. I didn't know some bureaucrat forgot to demonetise it but like you said it would be silly to pay for somethin that is worth 20p in government legal tender token. Gresham's law in action.

  • @TheIanevans1
    @TheIanevans1 Год назад +39

    My family went on holiday to England in 1962, the large old pennies and half-pennies from the Victorian era were still in everyday use.

    • @johnhankinson1929
      @johnhankinson1929 Год назад +1

      of course they would have done because we were still using them till 1972 , we could use them for a few months after decimalisation in 1971 as the banks carried on accepting them and melting them down

    • @Wally-H
      @Wally-H Год назад

      That makes sense as the size, composition and weight of them never changed right up until they were abolished in 1971. You'd have to go way back to the time of George IV to find coins of a different size and weight (even though the basic design on both sides was the same, i.e. Britannia on one side and the monarch's head on the other).

    • @aidy6000
      @aidy6000 Год назад +2

      I remember finding a stash of coins at my Grandmothers pub in the Early 00's my 8 year old brain was fried at the thought of a 3 pence piece.

    • @dcarbs2979
      @dcarbs2979 Год назад

      @@johnhankinson1929 Not necessarily 'of course'. Coins were not replaced as often as they are now, but some people might not know that. e.g. the £1 coin is already on it's 2nd design and it's only been in use for 40 years. Then as now, it would be a bit of a folly to spend coins made with silver (pre-1947) at face value.

    • @dcarbs2979
      @dcarbs2979 Год назад

      @@aidy6000 That was called a "throopenny bit" and became rhyming slang for 'tit'.

  • @MeTheRob
    @MeTheRob Год назад +8

    This is the first I have ever heard of a double florin, and I certainly never saw one in the twenty years I used the pre-decimal money.
    I loved the old coins, getting confused about the Georges and Edwards. There was something special about a Victorian coin, something from another world still in current use. And the obverse sides were pure whimsy - a little wren, a galleon, a portcullis, Britannia .....

    • @highpath4776
      @highpath4776 Год назад +2

      Interesting the Double Florin reverse is the same design as the Charles III QEII memorial 50p.

    • @ChimozuFu
      @ChimozuFu Год назад +1

      @@highpath4776 That design has been used quite frequently throughout history. First used, i believe, with Charles II on his crowns and 5 guinea coins

  • @insertnamehere5146
    @insertnamehere5146 Год назад +6

    Great video Mark and a good reminder that we should all hold cash lest they take it away and only digital currency be made the only way to pay which i am sure no one wants

    • @lapurta22
      @lapurta22 Год назад

      I have not willingly used cash in 20 years

    • @insertnamehere5146
      @insertnamehere5146 Год назад +1

      @@lapurta22 well, thats your decision but if you don't use it then you run the same risk that the Canadian truck drivers suffered when they protested last year. Justin Trudeau froze all their bank accounts. What would you do if the government did that to you?

  • @philipsmedia5268
    @philipsmedia5268 Год назад +2

    This is technically you can also include these other denominations the Quintuple Sovereign (first issued 1820), Sovereign and Half Sovereign (1817) are legal tender too, still conform to their original formats and have victorian variants in use. During 1991 Soverigns were issued to RAF aircrews to use in the Gulf War for barganing with local if they were unfortuanate to be downed behind enermy lines.

  • @r2gelfand
    @r2gelfand Год назад +8

    This reminds me of the $2 bill still in use today in America but not widely known amongst Americans of the younger generation. We also have the Susan B Anthony Dollar coin which baffles clerks everywhere.

    • @rdhunkins
      @rdhunkins Год назад +2

      I have a few Ike dollars I was given by an Uncle when I was a kid.

    • @Heike--
      @Heike-- Год назад +4

      America has the largest number of least-used currency anywhere. The 50 cent piece, the Susan B. Anthony dollar, the silver dollar, the $2 bill, the $50 bill, hardly anyone uses any of them. And just try to pass a $100 bill, immediate suspicion.

    • @L1V2P9
      @L1V2P9 Год назад +4

      People have been arrested for using the US two dollar bill. Many store clerks have never seen them and they call the police and an officer arrives who has never seen one either and places the customer under arrest. When the secret service arrives to investigate the "counterfeit" bill, all hell breaks loose and the customer is showered with apologies but may still consider filing a lawsuit. This has happened occasionally and a search of the topic will reveal some interesting stories.

    • @quintrankid8045
      @quintrankid8045 Год назад +3

      Does anyone feel tempted to acquire a 2 or 3 cent piece and try to spend it?

    • @tomhenry897
      @tomhenry897 Год назад

      Too many fake 100s and 50s around
      Banks will give you them but don’t want them

  • @markwebster4996
    @markwebster4996 Год назад +6

    In the USA near Detroit, about a decade back or so, a crook unfortunately robbed a senior of his pre WW2 coin and bill collection. The robber apparently didn’t know those bills were worth more than current currency in circulation so he used them at fast food restaurants and connivence shops. The shops didn’t know either since they look largely the same and gave many of them back to customers as change. 1930s bills from what I remember.

    • @Heike--
      @Heike-- Год назад

      What idiots. The robber, the cashiers and the people who took them in change without saying a word. You think I could go to Detroit and start passing Monopoly money?

    • @Xezlec
      @Xezlec Год назад

      @@Heike-- The stupidity is everywhere. I've seen businesses in my city refuse to accept $2 bills and dollar coins, insisting that they were clearly fake money because America doesn't have such things.

  • @timeywimey6664
    @timeywimey6664 Год назад +4

    As an avid coin collector, I have a double florin.

  • @jamesbe.734
    @jamesbe.734 Год назад +1

    Years ago I found a 1930 King George the 5 five cent(Canadian) coin in my change.
    It looks pretty cool, just recently got the so called " goth " coin in my change, one could argue the best looking
    coin ever!

  • @Rampagedd
    @Rampagedd Год назад +7

    Too many sheep and npcs today. They want to be governed harder. Cash is disappearing by design. Shame.

  • @R0swell5104
    @R0swell5104 Год назад +2

    Clearly being born post 1971 he never endured the torture required to calculate anything in £sd. Touch of rose tinted spectacles here.

  • @Yogasefski
    @Yogasefski Год назад +3

    Over here in the states, some people still use pre 1965 silver quarters. I’ve even collected some Liberty quarters from the mid 1920’s.

    • @quintrankid8045
      @quintrankid8045 Год назад

      Do they use them at face value? Or melt value?

    • @Yogasefski
      @Yogasefski Год назад

      @@quintrankid8045 face value, $0.25 USD

  • @warden330
    @warden330 Год назад +6

    The earliest florins introduced in 1849 were inscribed "one tenth of a pound", precisely because they were the first step in a decimalisation that then did not proceed further until 1971. I do remember coming across ones with this inscription in the 1960s, though very rarely as that inscription had been dropped quite early on.

  • @leanbongo7929
    @leanbongo7929 Год назад +4

    Being quite young, I never would have known! Once again a fun and informative video. Good work! 👍

  • @shieldwallofdragons
    @shieldwallofdragons Год назад +4

    A very interesting video Sir! The nice thing about the size and shapes of British money is as a drunk American service man out on the town in Cambridge I could just reach in my pocket, feel how many pounds and pence coins I had left and knew exactly how many pints I could drink before having to leave for the night. Ahh the Arcadia that is youth.

  • @nigeh5326
    @nigeh5326 Год назад +4

    In the nineties I took my 2 sons to Birmingham market where one stall had a pile of pre decimal coins.
    When I told my sons it was the money we had until the seventies they would not believe me, especially when they saw the threpenny bit 😂

  • @SuperVeganShark
    @SuperVeganShark Год назад +2

    The US had a twenty cent coin that was only used for a few years in the later part of the 19th century. It was too close in size to the quarter dollar and thus unpopular.

  • @Zebred2001
    @Zebred2001 Год назад +4

    I was born here in Canada in 1961. When I was a boy I had a 5 cent 1945 "Victory nickel" with a prominent "V" in my change. Not knowing any better I spent it on candy! Since my latter teen years I always pick out the old coins from my change and keep them. I especially liked our 1967 centennial issues and the 1973 RCMP "horse quarters."

    • @flargus7919
      @flargus7919 Год назад +1

      I always liked the centennial quarter with the lynx on it. I got one in my change from a shop some 15 years ago, and though I don't collect coins I knew it was something vaguely special when I saw it. Sadly, I lost it in a recent move, oh well.
      I have an RCMP quarter still, a few old pennies with George VI on them, and a few old Canadian $1 bills that I found in an envelope while clearing out my grandmother's belongings after she passed.

    • @rodchallis8031
      @rodchallis8031 Год назад +1

      I used to find "Victory" nickels in change into the 70's. And even sometimes the "tombac" nickels and pennies.

  • @charliedogg7683
    @charliedogg7683 Год назад +2

    A very interesting video. I don't believe that here in Australia, any pre-decimal coins are still legal tender (we went decimal in 1966) and I'm not even sure paper banknotes are still accepted in banks to be exchanged for polymer ones - these have been in use for a couple of decades.
    Like you, I use cash whenever I can and have walked out of businesses, mainly coffee shops, which refuse to accept cash despite being legally obliged to do so. Cash in one's pocket means control of one's own money.

  • @adrianhorsnell8900
    @adrianhorsnell8900 Год назад +4

    Mark, the word "florin" was not a nickname there were two shilling coins stamped as a "Florin". I've always understood that Florin means a tenth, so a florin coin is one tenth of a pound .

    • @ColinH1973
      @ColinH1973 Год назад +1

      The name of the coin is a corruption of 'Florence' where the coins originated.

    • @Kaffemosterful
      @Kaffemosterful Год назад +1

      Or 24 pence. Lovely old system.

  • @grahvis
    @grahvis Год назад +1

    During my life I have spent every coin from farthings to crowns, but I have never seen a double florin.
    I do remember when bun pennies were collected for charity, they stopped being made in 1894.

  • @-.Steven
    @-.Steven Год назад +3

    Very interesting! Just over 20 years ago, I used to buy 1oz Silver American Eagles for $3.00 each! There was usually a 4 coin limit. As an amateur numismatist, I've heard it said many times that the price of precious metals is "manipulated" by the city of London.

  • @josephbingham1255
    @josephbingham1255 Год назад +2

    Interesting
    A sidebar: A friend's grandfather died. His safe was found in a secret room behind a bookcase. It also was behind a plastered wall so only he knew where it was. Lawyers, a safe cracker and such where there when it was opened. It contained thousands in the old large currency notes. The type redeemable for gold and silver. The money was deposited into a bank at face value not collector's value. When the estate was divided the bank only gave back the face value - the individual bills having long disappeared. Shyster lawyers and bankers!

  • @dannyphilemon4962
    @dannyphilemon4962 Год назад +2

    Here in America it’s not uncommon to find old coins in change and even old paper money. One theory is that as the older generation dies off the kids and grand kids are spending they’re inherited coin collections at stores

  • @Zveebo
    @Zveebo Год назад +2

    Worth noting that ‘legal tender’ doesn’t mean you can demand to use it to pay for goods in the UK. Shops are free to chose what payment types they accept, including coinage. Its meaning is limited to having the right to use it to satisfy an existing debt.

  • @andrewg.carvill4596
    @andrewg.carvill4596 Год назад +4

    I was born in 1961 and my most vivid memory of the old coinage is the metallic swish, swish, swish sound of a palmful of the old copper pennies being counted out. And six of those big pennies were literally 'a palmful' for a small boy. In Dublin you'd get a varied mixture of English monarchs' heads with the lovely "hen and chicks" and "Irish harp" designs of the Irish 'EIRE' pennies. All gone now, except for the little harp on the reverse of the Irish 'Euro' coins.

    • @harpnant
      @harpnant Год назад

      Did you ever see farthings? A quarter of a penny, with a lovely sparrow inscribed.

  • @walterkronkitesleftshoe6684
    @walterkronkitesleftshoe6684 Год назад +2

    I remember as a young lad in the late 1960s being blown away by receiving a "ten bob note" a "bob" being UK slang for a shilling. ( for younger viewers 10 shillings was 120 "old" pence or 50 "new" pence, in other words a "fifty pence note") from an old aunt for my birthday. (So blown away that incredibly I never spent it on sweets, crisps and toys), and indeed still have it to this day.
    Also gold sovereigns and half sovereigns are also still legal tender in the UK, but I'm not sure I'd like to hand over a gold sovereign in place of a modern day cheapo £1 coin, with the gold in the sovereign now being worth several hundreds of pounds.
    P.S Well done for sticking to using REAL coinage & notes instead of cards.... unfortunately most people are oblivious to the ongoing drive to introduce CBDCs (central bank digital currencies) Only when it happens will all the "unthinkers" realise what they've sadly led us ALL into.

  • @hobokyle7504
    @hobokyle7504 Год назад +2

    If you've ever wondered what determined the size of US dimes/quarters/half dollars (and "half-dimes" if you go back far enough) it is because prior to 1965 they were all 90% silver. A dollar face value worth of coins always contain the same amount of silver (~ .72 ounces). So 10 dimes, 4 quarters, 2 half dollars (or any combination that adds up to $1) would always contain the same amount of precious metal, thus a quarter is 2.5 times the size of a dime, and half dollar 2 times the size of a quarter (which seems obvious but also explains why a nickel doesn't follow the same sizing standards since it did not contain any silver).

  • @stefanschleps8758
    @stefanschleps8758 Год назад +1

    I like the way you think Mark. Give me cash. I don't trust digital money, its far too easy to manipulate. And in any case, I am a numismatist, and would also only be too happy to relieve someone of a double Florin, though I have little British money to speak of. I too, like many others, find a certain nostalgia as I scrutinize over and over again my six pence and large cents circa 1870-1920, wherein I also fall prey to my over imagination, and wonder what it would have been like to live in that golden age of Queen Victoria and Sherlock Holmes. One of my prized possessions is a British Trade Dollar from Hong Kong, a beautiful piece. Thanks for sharing, at last the mystery of why British money has been so difficult is solved! All the best!

  • @ktipuss
    @ktipuss Год назад +3

    U.K. coins were the only legal coins in New Zealand until 1933. In Australia all lower denomination silver and copper coins were British until 1910, and continued in use along with Australian coins until the U.K. went off the gold standard in 1931. U.K. pennies could still turn up in change until 1966. Australia issued its own gold coins from 1855 until 1931. Australia did print off paper Marks for use in its Pacific territories that were former German colonies in 1914-15 and are extremely rare today.

    • @calebfuller4713
      @calebfuller4713 Год назад

      Australia still makes gold and silver coins today, (being one of the worlds largest gold producers) and they are still legal tender with dollar face values. However, their purpose is as bullion and they are sold for their metal value which is FAR above the face value, so you never see them in circulation day-to-day.

  • @vanordinaire
    @vanordinaire Год назад +1

    I still have some of the ‘old money’ that came through in the change in 1980, including a couple of early QE2 pound notes. I remember an older lady showing me how to use the launderette dryer “put your shilling in here……..”. Thanks for the nostalgia hit.

  • @oliverlorenz8733
    @oliverlorenz8733 Год назад +4

    This was very interresting. I am from germany and i was as a pupil for several weeks in Great Britain in Reading. This was in the early eighties and i remember the little confusing system with the coins of an earlier age.
    So now i am a collector of british coins, because it is very interresting to see the difference between the pre decimal and the decimal system.

    • @AtheistOrphan
      @AtheistOrphan Год назад +2

      I was a British/German exchange student in the early eighties, living in a tiny town called Stadtoldendorf (near Holzminden). 🇬🇧🤝🇩🇪

    • @oliverlorenz8733
      @oliverlorenz8733 Год назад +2

      ​@@AtheistOrphan Nice to meet you.

  • @anonym1984
    @anonym1984 Год назад +1

    In Denmark, all old Danish coins with a face value of 50 øre or above can be used as tender (although shops are not obliged to take it) or exchanged at banks to modern currency.
    The 50 øre limit would restrict the exchange of coins before 1873 cause thats when we started using Kroner and Øre, but Rigsbanksdaler/Rigsdaler coins from 1813-1872 were revalued at 1 daler to 2 kroner, so in theory you could exchange a Daler at face value for a piece of gum... Or the down payment on a small house if sold at auction.

  • @RyanHellyer
    @RyanHellyer Год назад +11

    We had the same situation in New Zealand with older non-decimal coins still be widely used and circulated.
    Oddly, when I worked as a petrol station attendant, I would semi-regularly be presented with silver New Zealand $1 coins. People were trying to spend them wherever they could, as pretty much nobody would accept them as they thought they were junk. But I had been a keen coin collector as a child and new that they were quite valuable so simply swapped my own gold NZ $1 coin for their silver $1 coin. I made about $100 off that within two years of working there, since the silver dollars were collectibles, albeit not worth as much since they'd been removed from their plastic cover and bashed around in circulation for a long time.

  • @jonclassical2024
    @jonclassical2024 Год назад +1

    Decimalization sounds like a scheme "Sir Humphrey" of "Yes Minister" would have been involved with. Decimalization was also made fun of in some episodes of "Are You Being Served". PS...you are such a young man Dr. Felton!

  • @DarthBaras13
    @DarthBaras13 Год назад +3

    When I was working at a hotel last year, I was doing the cash register routine when I saw two $1 coins. The years on them were before 1965 (they were made up of 90% silver). Savvily, I swapped out the two coins with dollar bills. The lesson we all should learn is that old cash can be diamonds when properly appraised.

    •  Год назад

      Same for 5DM, 10DM and quarter dollar coins, many people don‘t know that they sometimes are made up of silver. For example the 10DM coin has a value of 5€ but a silver value of roughly 7€ if it‘s a .625 coin.

  • @marvwatkins7029
    @marvwatkins7029 Год назад +1

    Between ha' pennies (?) and guineas, the UK has had a bewildering number of different coin specie. There must be at least a dozen. (Fortunately, I think doubloons and pieces of eight were Spanish, or off some other nationality.)
    Perhaps Dr. Mark Felton could do a segment on the different UK coinage. While not military history, it might make for a fascinating post (and hopefully it will be concise, as usual, because that subject could get drawn out).
    It's probably already on line somewhere. But Mark could make it more fascinating than most historians, certainly.

  • @pilgrimm23
    @pilgrimm23 Год назад +2

    Thank You Sir. I too am a student of history who stands on the shoulders of giants... like you. I have purchased and read many of your books. Prolific, readable, and packed with data. Also like you I have always preferred, and to this day still use cash for most purchases. The modern world seems to want the use of facial recognition and a check of yoru social credit to allow a transaction but I still believe in a handshake and an agreed cash transfer as the means of conducting commerce. By the way you failed to mention one coin that as far as I know is still legal tender: Royal Maundy Coins. Far more rare ( I own one) but I think, one could still use them.

  • @jamesbrown9736
    @jamesbrown9736 Год назад +1

    Dr. Felton like you I like old American silver coinage. Especially the Morgan, Walking Liberty and the Peace Dollar. Unfortunately they are hard to find outside coin shops. You rock on with the double florrin. God save the King.

  • @doublesteakhouse4475
    @doublesteakhouse4475 Год назад +8

    Great to hear that Mark is advocating the use of cash! Don't let them take away our freedoms

  • @millycarrington
    @millycarrington Год назад +1

    The Gold Sovereign (and half Sovereign) are still technically coins of the realm with a nominal value of £1 and 50 p respectively. The fact that they will cost you about £400 / £200 each just shows how much our currency has been devalued by the government through inflation! Remember inflation is caused by government printing of currency and the subsequent devaluing of it, not by prices going up. Prices going up is the result of inflation, not the cause of it.

  • @colin.d
    @colin.d Год назад +8

    You forgot the half crown coin (12.5p) which I remember back in the 1960's being a coin of some value not just because it weighed more but was the highest denomination pre-decimal coin in regular circulation.

  • @ansonleeXD
    @ansonleeXD Год назад +1

    Not Just the double florins,but also the old pre-decimal crowns(from 1818) and also the pre-decimal sovereigns(no longer in circulation)are still legal tender.Talking about continuity!

  • @johndoeboston123
    @johndoeboston123 Год назад +8

    Very interesting. The U.S. has never cancelled the legal tender status of any coin or note, and many Americans--including myself, I think--would regard such an act as a very deep violation of trust. The British psychological relationship with their cash seems slightly different: they they seem far more willing to regard cash as a mere token, and therefore take cash recalls in stride. I'm sure there are interesting historical reasons for this difference; just wish I knew what they were!

    • @cordeboer9774
      @cordeboer9774 Год назад

      Except the confederate dollars 😅

    • @messystudios8505
      @messystudios8505 Год назад

      Why would it be a violation of trust?

    • @juliegreen7604
      @juliegreen7604 Год назад

      I really don't think you have thought this through!
      The US has not "cancelled" the values of coins basically because you haven't changed them!
      You are in a very new country with almost zero history, whereas the UK as the rest of the old world has a very long history of different coinage and denominations over many many years.
      I have an 8 real coin from 1642, which is not usable today.
      Things move on, changes are made in currency and technology, whereas the old coins were worth exactly their weight in gold or silver, so an 8 real silver coin was always worth the same silver value (everything was harmonised into weight - 1 real was 1/8th the weight of an 8 real piece etc) today coins have basically no precious metal - their value is only worth their promise.
      So today it makes sense to forge coins and notes - more and more modern designs make this more difficult, as a result, the older versions, (and previous systems) end up being withdrawn.
      The US hasn't really been around long enough for this to happen to any great extent.

  • @bishopgreenhill4359
    @bishopgreenhill4359 Год назад +1

    In 1976 it was a heat wave like we had last year here in the UK,and I remember raiding my piggy bank for the 1p and half pence coins to buy a 10p mix of chews and bubble gums and then a ice pop or small fizzy drink….On the way home from the shops,I found a sixpence and went back hence forth.Think I bought a fizzy lemon ice lolly and saved the wrapper,you needed 20 to send off for a poster of first man on the moon.

  • @lupusdeum3894
    @lupusdeum3894 Год назад +1

    I have many 19th century British coins brought to Toronto & used by immigrants to pay for lodging at my grandmother's rooming house, but the oldest is a silver French Napoleon III coin.😮 💰

  • @fernandoreynaaguilar1438
    @fernandoreynaaguilar1438 Год назад +5

    Rule Victoria. Victoria rules the cash 😉

  • @danm7298
    @danm7298 Год назад +1

    I love when ppl bring me old coins at work. Just the other day somone gave me two 40% silver half dollars. Worth about ten,20$ US. Ive found silver quarters and dimes even mercurys, indian head cents, buffalo nickels. Even the occasional old canadians come thru as i live in michigan on the border.

  • @republiccommando3903
    @republiccommando3903 Год назад +4

    Based

  • @johnfisk811
    @johnfisk811 Год назад +4

    The Florin was so marked for quite some time after it was introduced in Victorian times as a facilitator for then proposed decimalisation. At a value of two shillings it was 1/10 of a pound. I was born in 1953 and we used a lot of actual Victorian coins including those of her early reign and many pennies were so worn that they were all but copper disks with only the faintest relic of their original marks.

  • @solracer66
    @solracer66 Год назад +1

    When traveling in England in late 1990 I received a well-worn shilling in change at some point. I noticed straight off that while it had a queen on it it wasn't Queen Elizabeth but rather Queen Victoria! This was before December 31 when the old coins stopped being legal tender but after the new 5 pence had been introduced. Needless to say I brought it home to America and I still have it 33 years later as a souvenir of my time in the UK (along with a new Scottish pound note I also kept).

  • @thejacal2704
    @thejacal2704 Год назад +3

    Hello Mark,
    I'm a 1974 baby too. It was almost mystifying as a child to have these old coins in my pockets. I used to do the drop test; the silver coins had a different sound!! I have quite a little hoard of them, not huge in value, but great memories.
    When we have CBDC it'll be a different world....
    Jon.
    By the way, being a bit of a military history geek myself, I love your work.

    • @thejacal2704
      @thejacal2704 Год назад

      @BB.639.. I beg to differ on that one.

    • @rusticpartyeditz
      @rusticpartyeditz Год назад

      @BB.639.. Shilling coins were still in circulation until the 5p was reduced in size in 1990 and two shilling coins were in circulation until 1992/3 when the smaller 10p was introduced.
      I certainly remember the old coins in the 1980s.

  • @MrDersuUzala
    @MrDersuUzala Год назад +2

    I love that this features "The Mark Felton Theme", even though it has nothing to do with Kursk.

  • @michael_177
    @michael_177 Год назад +2

    As a coin numismatist , thank you so much for this upload!

  • @jordanrendell7168
    @jordanrendell7168 Год назад +1

    Here in Hong Kong, the pre 1997 coins and banknotes are still in circulation but are slowly getting phased out, I have several coins dating from the 1970s and 1980s with Queen Elizabeth on the face of them

  • @cfoofnyhs
    @cfoofnyhs Год назад +1

    Yes Mark, Those Days... I'm also collecting those pre- decimal coins and I'm SOOOO happy having them.

  • @StevenRockwood
    @StevenRockwood Год назад +1

    I returned my old Canadian 1937 bills to the bank. I needed current up-to-date money back in the day for some nefarious reason ... Puff - Puff ... Pass! ...

  • @gypsydildopunks7083
    @gypsydildopunks7083 Год назад +1

    I still buy most things in cash just for the treasure hunt. I've found 15 War nickels, 30 or so silver Roosevelt dimes and countless wheat pennies. Even got an Eisenhower back in change fairly recently.

  • @44WillysMB
    @44WillysMB Год назад +1

    Your Yankee cousins across the pond know what sweets, and fizzy drinks are. We have all watched "Chitty Chitty Bang Bang".😜

  • @debirhinehart585
    @debirhinehart585 10 месяцев назад +1

    Victorian Currency may still be legal tender in the UK and old US currency is still valid Currency in the USA, but Kingdom of Hawaii currency is not legal currency in Hawaii.

  • @jstadman
    @jstadman Год назад +1

    Honestly when the Euro came out in 2002 I collected all the coins from all the countries, after a year or two I was done. Recently I decided to start collecting again, a lot of new coins have come out since 2003. So I started to pay cash again and honestly paying in cash is better :)

  • @queeg6473
    @queeg6473 Год назад +1

    Long after the new 5p coin came out I found alot of old 5p and 1 shilling coins in a dark recess of my bedroom. Soon after I started playing billiards. Why ? Well, I knew of a very old coin operated billiards table that only took 1 shilling coins.....

  • @thejudgmentalcat
    @thejudgmentalcat Год назад +1

    And you all thought Yankee measurements were complicated 😂 I give you...Victorian to digital coin currency 🤔

  • @JohnSmith-il7jn
    @JohnSmith-il7jn Год назад +1

    Mark, one area you should do is a video on is on the advancement of naval forces and capital ships from World War I, the interwar years, leading up to World War II. For instance, why did Germany have no carriers but the U.S.A and Britain did, etc.

  • @darwinqpenaflorida3797
    @darwinqpenaflorida3797 Год назад +1

    The One Japanese Yen banknote are still legal tender even it was printed in 1872 but despite it was remained valid, mostly are used for collectors called numismatists and the Bank of Japan(Nippon Ginko) are not advised due to financial loss