Logo Title
obverse
reverse
Münzkabinett Berlin CC0
Context
Years: 1838–1868
Ruler: Victoria
Currency:
(1158—1970)
Demonetized: Yes
Total mintage: 52,764,600
Material
Diameter: 19.3 mm
Weight: 2.83 g
Silver weight: 2.62 g
Thickness: 0.95 mm
Shape: Round
Composition: 92.5% Silver
Magnetic: No
Technique: Milled
Alignment: Coin alignment
Obverse
OBVERSE ↑
flip
Reverse
REVERSE ↓
References
KM: #Click to copy to clipboard733
Numista: #13210
Value
Bullion value: $7.49

Obverse

Description:
Young Head Victoria left, legend around.
Inscription:
VICTORIA DEI GRATIA BRITANNIAR: REG: F: D:
Translation:
Victoria by the Grace of God Queen of the Britains Defender of the Faith
Script: Latin
Language: Latin
Engraver: William Wyon

Reverse

Description:
Crowned denomination in wreath, date below. May have die number above date.
Inscription:
SIX

PENCE

1839
Script: Latin

Edge

Reeded

Mints

NameMark
Royal Mint (Tower Hill)

Mintings

YearMint MarkMintageQualityCollection
18381,607,700
1838Proof
1839Proof
18393,310,500
18402,098,800
18411,386,000
1842601,900
18433,160,000
1844
18453,714,400
18464,268,800
1848586,000
1850498,900
18512,288,100
1852904,500
18533,837,900
1853Proof
1854840,100
1855Proof
18551,129,000
18562,779,900
18572,233,400
18581,932,400
1858Proof
18594,688,600
18601,100,800
1862990,000
1863491,000
18644,253,000
18651,631,500
1866
18671,362,200
18681,069,200

Historical background

In 1838, the United Kingdom was operating under a de facto gold standard, established following the landmark Resumption Act of 1819. This legislation had mandated a return to gold convertibility after the suspension during the Napoleonic Wars, a process completed in 1821. The official price was set at £3 17s 10½d per ounce of gold, meaning Bank of England notes were freely exchangeable for gold bullion upon demand. This system aimed to ensure monetary discipline and stability, but it existed alongside a complex mix of circulating media, including gold sovereigns, Bank of England notes (which were legal tender), and a plethora of private provincial banknotes of varying reliability.

The period was, however, one of intense monetary controversy. A powerful political and intellectual movement, the Currency School, argued that the existing system was inherently unstable. They believed that the over-issuance of banknotes by country banks, not fully backed by gold reserves, fuelled speculative booms and painful busts, like the crisis of 1825. Their proposed solution, which would culminate in the Bank Charter Act of 1844, was to rigidly tie the issuance of banknotes to the Bank of England's gold reserves, effectively creating a monopoly on note-issue for the central bank to prevent oversupply.

Opposing them, the Banking School contended that the Currency School's analysis was flawed. They argued that banknotes were merely a component of a broader credit system and that restricting their issue alone would not prevent crises, instead potentially exacerbating commercial credit shortages. For the ordinary person in 1838, the debate was abstract, but its implications were real: the stability of the money they used, the availability of credit for businesses, and the nation's overall economic health hung in the balance, setting the stage for the pivotal legislative battle of the following decade.

Series: 1838 United Kingdom circulation coins

1 Farthing obverse
1 Farthing reverse
1 Farthing
1838-1864
½ Penny obverse
½ Penny reverse
½ Penny
1838-1860
1½ Pence obverse
1½ Pence reverse
1½ Pence
1838-1870
2 Pence obverse
2 Pence reverse
2 Pence
1838-1887
3 Pence obverse
3 Pence reverse
3 Pence
1838-1887
6 Pence obverse
6 Pence reverse
6 Pence
1838-1868
1 Shilling obverse
1 Shilling reverse
1 Shilling
1838-1887
🌱 Common