Trinique_Fire
Daddi's Princess
- Joined
- Dec 15, 2004
- Posts
- 10,550
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I have a George V penny from 1928. It's from Great Britain. I had some luck finding basic information about it here (you have to click on the year 1928 at the bottom)
Does anyone know what the worth might be?
In that condition it is worth about 10 pence or twenty pence - except if you buy it from a coin dealer.
I have been supplying my local museum with such coins that I buy in bulk from boot and yard sales. They put them in labelled packets for each decade and sell six mixed 1920s coins for 2.50 (about 5 dollars). It's a rip-off but a cheap souvenir and can get younger people interested in history.
Og
Coins are fun. Mine's in better condition than the one in the picture, just tarnished. Any way to safely polish a coin this old?!
You can look online for coin polishes, but I would imagine that since it's copper, tin and zinc (if I read that right), regular copper polish would be okay.
Coins are fun. Mine's in better condition than the one in the picture, just tarnished. Any way to safely polish a coin this old?
I never knew that museums bought coins that way! Wish I'd known when I still lived in the city. I would have had quite a bit to provide them with!!
I've used vinegar to polish American pennies...but never with one this old...should I stay away from vinegar and stick to real polish?
1928 isn't old. It was still in circulation until 1971.
Vinegar is better than polish. Polish removes some of the surface and you will gradually lose detail.
In one of my local museums I can buy Roman coins from 300AD for about 3 dollars. Age doesn't affect value. Condition and rarity dictate the price.
I have a collection of several thousand old coins but my interest is mainly French coinage. I have a couple minted during the French Revolution that were made from the melted-down church bells of Paris.
Og
1928 isn't old. It was still in circulation until 1971.
...
I have a collection of several thousand old coins but my interest is mainly French coinage. I have a couple minted during the French Revolution that were made from the melted-down church bells of Paris.
Og
I have a silver sixpence dated 1958 that I keep in my wallet (so I'm never completely broke) -- I suspect it's probably worth more for the silver content than for the numismatic value.
(I also have a canandian penny, a US Lincoln Penny that's as old as I am, and a silver(ish) "Un decima de Bolivar" that I have absolutely no idea where I acquired it. (It's the same size as the sixpence which I got from an english "slot machine" that took "6D" tokens after the new money changeover, so I probably got it the same place.)
Listen to Og...he knows a lot more than I do.![]()
1928 isn't old. It was still in circulation until 1971.
Vinegar is better than polish. Polish removes some of the surface and you will gradually lose detail.
In one of my local museums I can buy Roman coins from 300AD for about 3 dollars. Age doesn't affect value. Condition and rarity dictate the price.
I have a collection of several thousand old coins but my interest is mainly French coinage. I have a couple minted during the French Revolution that were made from the melted-down church bells of Paris.
Og
I recently sold a 1928 Silver Dollar for $850. But you have to be very careful because dealers will try to screw you. One dealer insisted the coin was a forgery, another dealer offered me $10 and swore the coin was common (it isnt). I finally found a dealer who was honest.