Dictionary Definition
twopenny adj : of trifling worth [syn: sixpenny, threepenny, tuppeny, two-a-penny,
twopenny-halfpenny]
User Contributed Dictionary
English
Adjective
- Having a value or cost of twopence.
Extensive Definition
The penny of King
Edward VII (1901–1910) is of the same technical
standards as the late
Victorian issues. The head on the obverse is by
George William de Saulles (1862–1903), facing right,
with the inscription EDWARDVS VII DEI GRA BRITT OMN REX FID DEF IND
IMP. The reverse shows the seated Britannia
surrounded by ONE PENNY and over the date, which remained the
standard design until 1970, although there is a variety of some
1902 pennies known as the low tide penny, where the sea appears
exceptionally low on Britannia's leg. Pennies were produced for all
years of Edward VII's reign.
King
George V (1910–1936) pennies were produced to the
same standard until 1922, but after a three year gap in production
the alloy composition was changed in 1925 to 95.5% copper, 3% tin, and 1.5% zinc, although the weight remained
9.4 grams and the diameter 31 millimetres. The inscription around
the three variations of the left-facing king's head remained
GEORGIVS V DEI GRA BRITT OMN REX FID DEF IND IMP, while Britannia
remained on the reverse, as before. In addition to the Royal Mint in
the Tower of
London, in 1912, 1918 and 1919 some coins were produced at the
Heaton
Mint in Birmingham, and
are identified by a "H" to the left of the date, and in 1918 and
1919 some were also produced at the Kings Norton Metal Co. Ltd,
also in Birmingham, and are identified by "KN" to the left of the
date. Pennies were produced in 1911–1922 inclusive, and
1926–1936 inclusive bearing George V's effigy, however
the 1933 penny is the great British numismatic rarity of the 20th
century — only seven coins were minted, specifically for
the king to lay under the foundation stones of new buildings; one
of the coins went missing when a church in Leeds was demolished
in the 1960s, and its whereabouts are currently unknown.
History of the 1933 Penny
There was no requirement for the Mint to produce
any pennies in 1933 because there were already enough in
circulation. Requests were, however, received for sets of coins
dated 1933 to be placed under the foundation stones of buildings
erected in that year, and the Mint obliged by striking a small
number of coins. The result was to create a rarity that many people
thought could turn up in their change. This became particularly
apparent during the run up to the UK's decimalisation on 15
February, 1971.
The precise number struck was not recorded at the
time but it is now thought to be certainly less than ten and
probably seven. The surviving 1933 pennies are to be found in the
Mint Museum, the British Museum, the University of London and two
in private collections - see list below. It has been reported that
one example had been placed under the foundation stone of St.
Mary’s Church, Hawksworth Wood, Kirkstall, Leeds, England. Three
documented examples had been placed in foundation stones of
buildings erected in 1933. In September 1970, during construction
at Church of St. Cross, Middleton, one of these examples was stolen
by thieves who managed to remove the coin from the church's
cornerstone. In response, the Bishop of Ripon ordered that the St.
Mary's Church 1933 Penny be unearthed and sold as a protective
measure to prevent its theft. It was sold at Sotheby's Auction
house on 24 November 1972. There are seven (now possibly eight)
known examples of the 1933 penny. Here are their locations: 1.
Royal Mint Museum at Llantrisant in South Wales 2. British Museum
3. Under the foundation stone of the University of London Building
in Bloomsbury, London 4. Under the foundation stone of St Mary's
Church, Hawksworth Wood, Kirkstall, Leeds - this one was part of a
1933 year set which was stolen circa 2003 5. Under the foundation
stone of the Church of St Cross, Middleton - this one was part of a
1933 year set which was stolen in 1970 6. One held as part of the
Norweb Private Collection in the USA 7. One held in private hands
in the UK
Remarkably, one 1933 penny made a form of public
appearance around 1967/68. A loan company ran a national advert in
UK newspapers with the headline "Fourpence could bring you up to
£3,000", referring to the cost of posting an application.
Sharp-eyed readers noticed that one of the four coins in the
accompanying photograph was actually a 1933 penny, and one wrote
in, asking "Why ask for £3,000 when one of the coins is worth that
alone?". When creating the advert originally, the photo had been
produced using recent, shiny coins. However it was decided that the
coins were too reflective and older pennies were substituted. One
of the staff simply pulled out some coins from his pocket, and one
of these was a 1933 penny, which went completely un-noticed by
anyone. After the photos were taken, he took the coins back again
and later spent them.
A penny of King
Edward VIII (1936) does exist, dated 1937, but technically it
is a pattern coin
i.e. one produced for official approval which it would probably
have been due to receive about the time that the King abdicated. The obverse shows
a left-facing portrait of the king (who considered this to be his
best side, and consequently broke the tradition of alternating the
direction in which the monarch faces on coins — some
viewed this as indicating bad luck for the reign); the inscription
on the obverse is EDWARDVS VIII D G BR OMN REX F D IND IMP.
King
George VI's pennies (1937-1952) also have a left-facing bust of
the king, with the inscription (to 1948) GEORGIVS VI D G BR OMN REX
F D IND IMP, and (from 1949) GEORGIVS VI D G BR OMN REX FIDEI DEF.
Pennies were produced dated 1937–1940, and
1944–1952, although when necessary pennies were produced
for the
colonies in 1941–43 using the 1940 dies; the 1950 and
1951 circulation pennies were only produced for the colonies as
none were needed in Britain — when collecting pennies by
year became fashionable in the early 1960s it was discovered that
virtually the entire 1951 production of 120,000 coins had been sent
to Bermuda
and considerable effort was made to buy as many specimens as
possible and many wild claims were made about their investment
value (currently about £30 in uncirculated grade). The worldwide
shortage of tin during the Second
World War caused a change in the alloy in 1944–45 to
97% copper, 0.5% tin, 2.5% zinc, but this bronze tarnishes unattractively,
and the original 95.5% Cu, 3% Sn, 1.5% Zn alloy was restored later
in 1945. One 1952 penny believed to be unique was struck by the
Royal Mint.
The series of pennies concludes with the
pre-decimalisation
issues for Queen
Elizabeth II. Because of the large number of pennies in
circulation there was no real reason to produce any more in the
1950s, however a large number of specimen sets were issued in 1953
for the Coronation, with the obverse inscribed ELIZABETH II DEI GRA
BRITT OMN REGINA F D around the right-facing bust of the Queen by
Mary
Gillick. In all subsequent mintings of the penny the
inscription was ELIZABETH II DEI GRATIA REGINA F D. At least one
1954 penny was struck, apparently for private internal purposes at
the Royal Mint, but it was not until 1961 that there was a need for
more pennies to be minted, and production continued each year until
1967, and after (as pennies continued to be minted with the date
1967 until 1970). The 97% copper, 0.5% tin, 2.5% zinc alloy was
used again for the 1960s pennies. Finally, there was an issue of
proof quality coins produced in 1970, to bid farewell to a
denomination which had served the country well for 1200 years.
Thereafter, with decimalisation the new
penny carried a value of 1/100 of a pound.
Introduction of decimal currency temporarily
inserted "new" between the number and "penny" or "pence": "five new
pence", etc. Though short-lived, this addition served to regularize
pronunciations. Right up to the time of decimalization,
pronunciation was idiosyncratic. In standard English, an upward
count in half-penny increments was pronounced as "a hayp'ny, a
penny, a penny hayp'ny (or three hay'pence), tupp'nce, tupp'nce
hayp'ny, thripp'nce" (or "thrupp'nce" or "threpp'nce"), and so
forth. Used adjectivally, tupenny, tupenny-hay'penny, and threpenny
were common. The pronunciations common today would have sounded
very stilted.
References
- Coincraft's Standard Catalogue English & UK Coins 1066 to Date, Richard Lobel, Coincraft. ISBN 0-9526228-8-2
External links
- British Coins - Free information about British coins. Includes an online forum.
Synonyms, Antonyms and Related Words
beggarly, beneath contempt,
cheap, cheesy, common, contemptible, crummy, despicable, gaudy, gimcracky, mean, meretricious, miserable, paltry, pathetic, pitiable, pitiful, poor, rubbishy, sad, scrubby, scruffy, scummy, scurvy, scuzzy, shabby, shoddy, sorry, trashy, trumpery, two-for-a-cent,
two-for-a-penny, twopenny-halfpenny, valueless, vile, worthless, wretched