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Replies: 154 / Views: 26,898 |
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Pillar of the Community
United States
1694 Posts |
wow thats a nice Middlesex
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Pillar of the Community
United States
9792 Posts |
Quote: wow thats a nice Middlesex I'd even say it's rather sexy for a Middlesex token. 
"Buy the Book Before You Buy the Coin" - Aaron R. Feldman - "And read it" - Me 2013! ANA Life Member #3288 in good standing since 1981, ANS, Early American Coppers Member (EAC), Colonial Coin Collectors Club member (C4), Conder Token Collector Club member (CTCC), Civil War Token Society (CWTS) member, Liberty Seated Collectors Club (LSCC) & Numismatic Bibliomania Society member (NBS), USMex, Member in good standing, 2¢ variety collector. See my want page: http://goccf.com/t/140440
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Valued Member
United States
343 Posts |
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Moderator
 United States
188770 Posts |
Nice example! 
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Pillar of the Community
 Australia
2536 Posts |
I'm not sure if this is still the appropriate topic for tradesmans tokens, Conders etc, but here are mine for what they are worth. 1790 Macclesfield Halfpenny token D&H 24 Charles Roe Copper Works  1801 Stafford Penny D&H 3  1789 Assoc. Irish Mine Company Halfpenny Token D&H 5 
The Ox moves slowly, but the Earth is patient.
Edited by ttkoo 12/16/2023 9:23 pm
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Moderator
 United States
188770 Posts |
Great examples! 
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Bedrock of the Community
United States
36782 Posts |
Very nice Middlesex 27 T.Hall.
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Pillar of the Community
United States
4964 Posts |
Cool coins ttkoo, I've always had kind of a soft spot for Conder tokens. Here are a couple I haven't posted here.  
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Pillar of the Community
 Australia
2536 Posts |
@chrsmat71 Yeah, yours are really nice. I like the soft 17 on the Kent Lamberhurst Halfpenny. Do you have the edge lettering? I think there are 4 varieties, 2 are rare. I don't have a Withers catalogue of 19th century tokens yet, working on it. I'm just branching into tradesman's tokens. Hard to source at a reasonable price down-under, and international delivery can be a killer. Still, grab what ya can!
The Ox moves slowly, but the Earth is patient.
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Moderator
 United States
188770 Posts |
Quote: Here are a couple I haven't posted here. Very nice! 
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Pillar of the Community
United States
4964 Posts |
Hey thanks JBuck! ttkoo, yeah the Kent token does have edge lettering, I took a pic... "payable at Lancaster, London, or Bristol" , I've always liked edge lettering for some reason, definitely a plus when I see it on token or any coin really.  Also found a couple other token I hadn't posted here...  
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Pillar of the Community
 Australia
2536 Posts |
Quote: ttkoo, yeah the Kent token does have edge lettering, I took a pic...
"payable at Lancaster, London, or Bristol" , I've always liked edge lettering for some reason, definitely a plus when I see it on token or any coin really. The edge lettering rings my bell too! Your's is one of the rarer varieties, nice one.  The 1811 Bath Penny looks good enough to eat. I have the Sir Isaac Newton 1793, but in awful condition, on mine his portrait is all but gone. Your example is superb, well collected!
The Ox moves slowly, but the Earth is patient.
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Pillar of the Community
United States
1058 Posts |
chrsmat71, nice tokens! Without knowing how much digging you've done into the 19th-century pieces, I'll just point out that your Bath Penny is known among specialists (ahem, like me  ) as Withers 15. There are three recorded varieties, depending on the combination of edge graining and die rotation, so you'll have to let us know back here which you've managed to acquire: W15: edge /////, dies  (Common) W15a: edge /////, dies  (Very Common) W15b: edge \\\\\, dies  (RRR = extremely rare) At the time this token circulated, Samuel Whitchurch was into metals and William Dore handled textiles, both in fabrication and sales at the local level. They probably partnered up on issuing this token after getting to know one another as sponsors of a private boys school, but no one knows for sure what brought them together. Interestingly, they released three silver tokens as well, all in the then-unheard-of four shillings denomination, issued nowhere else during the Regency Period and not seen again until Victoria's double florins appeared in 1887 for her Jubilee. Here's one of my Bath specimens, Dalton Somersetshire15 (RR): 
"If everything seems to be under control, you're just not going fast enough." --- Mario Andretti
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Moderator
 United States
188770 Posts |
Quote: Also found a couple other token I hadn't posted here... Nice pair!  Quote: Here's one of my Bath specimens, Dalton Somersetshire15 (RR): Excellent! 
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Pillar of the Community
United States
4964 Posts |
Thanks again JB and thanks for the info ttkoo and daltonista! I'm not at all a specialist, I had two blank pages in my coin album and just decided to fill them with Conder type tokens a few years ago. Just such huge interesting variety and lost of cool art on them.
That silver Bath token is very nice, I picked up my first silver token. Looks like that collection my stray out of it's original two pages in the album!
My Bath token is 15a, had to get it out and look at it but added that to my coin info!
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Replies: 154 / Views: 26,898 |
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