Logo Title
obverse
reverse
Heritage Auctions
Context
Years: 1831–1837
Ruler: William IV
Currency:
(1158—1970)
Demonetization: 31 December 1869
Total mintage: 1,303,600
Material
Diameter: 34 mm
Weight: 18.9 g
Thickness: 2.5 mm
Shape: Round
Composition: Copper
Magnetic: No
Technique: Milled
Alignment: Medal alignment
Obverse
OBVERSE ↑
flip
Reverse
REVERSE ↑
References
KM: #Click to copy to clipboard707
Numista: #12810

Obverse

Description:
King William IV bare head right, legend around, date below. Varieties exist.
Inscription:
GULIELMUS IIII DEI GRATIA

1834
Translation:
William IV by the Grace of God
Script: Latin
Language: Latin
Engraver: William Wyon

Reverse

Description:
Britannia seated right, holding trident and Union Jack shield, with legend around and national flowers below.
Inscription:
BRITANNIAR: REX FID: DEF:
Translation:
King of the Britains, Defender of the Faith
Script: Latin
Language: Latin
Engraver: William Wyon

Edge

Plain

Categories

Object> Armour
Plants> Flower

Mints

NameMark
Royal Mint (Tower Hill)

Mintings

YearMint MarkMintageQualityCollection
1831806,400
1831Proof
1834322,500
1837174,700

Historical background

In 1831, the United Kingdom operated under a bimetallic standard, where both gold and silver were legal tender, but the system was de facto dominated by gold. The pivotal legislation was the 1816 Coinage Act, which had officially placed the country on a gold standard by making the gold sovereign (containing 123.27 grains of standard gold) the principal unit of account. Silver coins were relegated to "token" status, meaning their face value was higher than their intrinsic metal value, and they were legal tender only for limited amounts to prevent melting or export. This structure aimed to provide a stable, uniform national currency after the economic turbulence of the Napoleonic Wars, which had seen the suspension of gold convertibility for Bank of England notes from 1797 to 1821.

However, the currency situation was not without tension. The period following the restoration of convertibility in 1821 was marked by deflationary pressure and frequent complaints, particularly from agrarian and debtor interests, about a "scarcity of money" and the high value of gold. These groups often blamed the strict metallic standard for falling prices and economic distress. Concurrently, the banking landscape was fragmented and unstable; hundreds of private banks in England and Wales issued their own paper notes, leading to periodic failures and losses for holders, especially during the 1825-26 banking crisis. This underscored a lack of uniformity and security in the wider circulating medium beyond the gold coinage.

Thus, 1831 found the nation at a crossroads, with a formally stable gold core but a pressing need for broader monetary reform. The key issues were the regulation of country banknote issues and the desire for a more secure and uniform paper currency. These debates would culminate just two years later in the landmark Bank Charter Act of 1833, which confirmed the legal-tender status of Bank of England notes, and more definitively in the Bank Charter Act of 1844, which sought to centralize note-issuing authority and firmly anchor the entire system to gold reserves.

Series: 1831 United Kingdom circulation coins

1 Farthing obverse
1 Farthing reverse
1 Farthing
1831-1837
1 Penny obverse
1 Penny reverse
1 Penny
1831-1837
6 Pence obverse
6 Pence reverse
6 Pence
1831-1837
1 Shilling obverse
1 Shilling reverse
1 Shilling
1831-1837
½ Crown obverse
½ Crown reverse
½ Crown
1831-1837
1 Sovereign obverse
1 Sovereign reverse
1 Sovereign
1831-1837
½ Sovereign obverse
½ Sovereign reverse
½ Sovereign
1831-1834
🌱 Fairly Common