Could this be the last ever Scottish 50p?

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The last ever Scottish 50p?

Scotland has long enjoyed good representation on UK currency, especially on the commemorative coins of the last 30 years.

But with the vote for Scottish independence looming, could this be the end for Scottish themes on coins used across the whole of Britain?

If so, the 50p just issued to mark the Glasgow Commonwealth Games would become the last ever Scottish 50p issued whilst the Union is still intact.

Firsts and lasts

Collectors know that ‘firsts’ and ‘lasts’ are often the most sought after issues.  Sometimes this only becomes apparent in the years following the event – when the true importance of the coin is revealed.

With this in mind, the 2014 Glasgow Commonwealth Games 50p could be one of the most unintentionally important issues of the early 21st century.

You have to go back to 1707 to find the last pre-Union coins, struck during the reign of Queen Anne.  These are now some of the most collectable issues of her reign, and usually the preserve of serious collections only.

So if you happen to be the owner of one of these 50ps, only time will tell how important it could become – regardless it’s a coin with a story of genuine national importance, and one that should definitely be considered for your collection.


If you are interested…

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The DateStamp(TM) UK Commonwealth Games 50p

The Westminster Collection has a small number of these 50ps remaining from our Commonwealth Games commemorative range.

They are encapsulated and postmarked on the day of the closing ceremony, making them particularly limited.  Click here for more information.

Why we will soon all know the story of the boy soldier on a stamp …

the great war 1914 private tickle stamp 400 - Why we will soon all know the story of the boy soldier on a stamp …The prospect of going to fight for your King and Country would seem bizarre for most teenagers today.

But in 1914, that is exactly what William Cecil ‘Billie’ Tickle did.  At just 15 – officially three years too young to enlist – he lied about his age and joined the British Army at the start of the First World War.

Originating from Hornsey in Middlesex, he was just an ordinary teenager but found himself in 9th Battallion, Essex Regiment, fighting alongside countless young soldiers like himself.  His troop was thrust into France the following spring after training, and straight in the midst of heavy battle.

Against all odds, Private Tickle made it through until 1916 and the Battle of the Somme.  On 3rd July 1916, Private 13510 Tickle was killed in action at Ovillers, and his body never found.  But not before he sent a photo of himself in his uniform back home to his mother…

His mother’s handwritten note underneath describes him as ‘One of the very best.’  Billy Boy’s story is not exceptional, there are plenty more stories like his.  But little did he know that one hundred years later that very photograph would be chosen by Royal Mail to feature on an official British 1st Class postage stamp.

The smiling portrait of Private Tickle appears alongside five other stamps in Royal Mail’s ‘Great War’ Issue, which is being released on Monday 28th July to coincide with the Centenary of the outbreak of the First World War.

royal mail wwi stamps - Why we will soon all know the story of the boy soldier on a stamp …


n623 - Why we will soon all know the story of the boy soldier on a stamp …These stamps are now available to own on a limited edition Silver Proof Coin Cover.

NOW SOLD OUT.

Do you own the UK’s rarest 50p piece? And it’s not Kew Gardens.

Last week a 50p coin that many thousands of people have found in their daily pocket change started to be sold on e-Bay for prices upward of £100.00. Or to put it another way, 200 times its actual value!

50p graph1 - Do you own the UK’s rarest 50p piece?  And it’s not Kew Gardens.

Only 109,000 1992 EC 50p were issued into circulation – roughly half of the Kew Gardens 50p.

It was all because the Royal Mint announced that the Kew Gardens 50p coins is the UK’s most scarce circulation coin, with just 210,000 pieces ever been placed into circulation. The result was a media storm and the inevitable overnight ramping of prices.

Half the circulation of the Kew Gardens 50p

But what few people realise is that there is an even rarer UK 50p piece that was issued in half the number of the Kew Gardens coin – just 109,000 coins.

The coin was issued in 1992 to mark the EC Single Market and the UK presidency of the Council of Ministers – perhaps not the most popular of topics, which maybe was the reason so very few were pushed out into circulation. But of course, its lack of popularity at the time, is the very thing that now makes its Britain’s rarest 50p coin.

Sadly, however hard you search, unlike the Kew Gardens 50p, you will not find this one in your change. That’s because it is one of the old-sized 50p coins that were demonetised in 1998.

The coin itself was designed by Mary Milner Dickens and pictures the UK’s place at the head of the Council of Ministers’ conference table. The stars represent each of the nations’ capital cities placed in their relative geographical position.

But it won’t be the coin’s clever design that will guarantee its numismatic interest for years to come. It is its status as the UK’s most rare circulation 50p is what will intrigue collectors and have them searching and saving up in years to come.


Are you interested in owning the UK’s rarest 50p coin?

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The 1992 EC Single Market 50p

Limited stocks of the 1992 EC 50p coin are available from The Westminster Collection for £20.

NOW SOLD OUT