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Series

Royal Mint: Coinage: Imperial (Copper, Bronze and Base Metal)

Catalogue reference: MINT 8

What's it about?

MINT 8

General papers of the Royal Mint relating to imperial copper and bronze coinage, 1785-1940.Also included are account books and ledgers 1672 to 1943 and comptrolment rolls 1821 to 1832 relating to English, Irish and overseas coinage and to the...

Full description and record details

Reference

MINT 8

Title
Royal Mint: Coinage: Imperial (Copper, Bronze and Base Metal)
Date

1672-1943

Description

General papers of the Royal Mint relating to imperial copper and bronze coinage, 1785-1940.

Also included are account books and ledgers 1672 to 1943 and comptrolment rolls 1821 to 1832 relating to English, Irish and overseas coinage and to the operation of the Royal Mint; papers relating to the withdrawal of the old Tower halfpence and entry books of correspondence relating to copper and bronze coinage, 1825-1868.

Held by
The National Archives, Kew
Legal status

Public Record(s)

Language

English

Physical description

37 files and volumes

Subjects
Topics
Ireland
Administrative / biographical background

The production of copper coinage began in 1672 and continued intermittently until 1701. It resumed in 1719 and continued with some breaks to 1775. By 1797, there were so many counterfeit half pence in circulation that the Government decided upon the issue of a new copper coinage consisting of two pences, pence, half pence and farthings. Production of this coinage was contracted to the firm of Boulton and Watt during the period 1797 to 1807.

When ample supplies of the new coins had become available, the public refused to take the old half pence issued by the Mint from 1719 to 1775; and an Order in Council for its withdrawal was issued in 1814. The withdrawal of the old half pence, which had then become known as the Old Tower half pence, continued until they were stopped by proclamation of the 17th December, 1817.

In 1860, bronze coins were introduced and the old copper coins were withdrawn by 1869. The Royal Mint continued to produce bronze coins throughout the nineteenth and early twentieth centuries, although some were made by contractors - Heaton and Son, the Birmingham Mint and the King's Norton Metal Company. A new formula for making bronze coins came in in 1922 and some earlier designs of coin began to be withdrawn in that year.

Record URL
https://beta.nationalarchives.gov.uk/catalogue/id/C11020/

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This record is held at The National Archives, Kew

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Within the department: MINT

Records of the Royal Mint

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Royal Mint: Coinage: Imperial (Copper, Bronze and Base Metal)

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