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1 Crown – United Kingdom

United Kingdom
Context
Years: 1927–1936
Ruler: George V
Currency:
(1158—1970)
Total mintage: 35,865
Material
Diameter: 38.61 mm
Weight: 28.28 g
Silver weight: 14.14 g
Shape: Round
Composition: 50% Silver
Magnetic: No
Technique: Milled
Alignment: Medal alignment
Obverse
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Reverse
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References
KM: #Click to copy to clipboard836
Numista: #8475
Value
Bullion value: $41.09

Obverse

Description:
Uncrowned portrait of King George V left, circular legend.
Inscription:
GEORGIVS V DEI GRA: BRITT: OMN: REX

BM
Translation:
George V by the Grace of God King of all the Britains
Script: Latin
Language: Latin

Reverse

Description:
Crowned date in wreath of national flowers, surrounded by legend.
Inscription:
·FID· ·DEF· ·IND· ·IMP·

1933

·CROWN·

KG
Translation:
In Faith, Defender, Emperor of India.

1933

Crown

KG
Script: Latin
Language: Latin

Edge

Reeded

Categories

Symbol> Crown
Plants> Flower

Mints

NameMark
Royal Mint (Tower Hill)

Mintings

YearMint MarkMintageQualityCollection
19272Proof
19289,034
1928Proof
19294,994
1929Proof
19304,847
1930Proof
19314,056
1931Proof
19322,395
1932Proof
19337,132
1933Proof
1934932
1934Proof
1936Proof
19362,473

Historical background

In 1927, the United Kingdom's currency situation was dominated by the aftermath of its 1925 decision to return to the Gold Standard at the pre-war parity of £1 = $4.86. Championed by Chancellor of the Exchequer Winston Churchill, this move aimed to restore London's financial prestige and price stability. However, the chosen parity overvalued sterling by an estimated 10-15%, making British exports prohibitively expensive on the world market. This crippled key industries like coal, textiles, and shipbuilding, leading to stagnant growth, persistent unemployment, and social unrest, most notably the 1926 General Strike.

The policy created a difficult balancing act for the Bank of England. To maintain gold reserves and defend the fixed exchange rate, it was forced to keep interest rates relatively high, which further stifled domestic investment and economic recovery. This "hard money" stance attracted short-term capital flows but came at the cost of long-term industrial health. Consequently, the UK economy in 1927 was characterised by a stark dichotomy: financial orthodoxy and stability in the City of London contrasted sharply with industrial decline and deflationary pressure in the regions.

Internationally, the situation created tensions, particularly with the United States and France. The UK resented the lower interest rates and rising gold reserves in New York and Paris, believing the Federal Reserve and the Banque de France were not playing by the unwritten rules of the Gold Standard to ease global conditions. By 1927, these pressures led to a secret conference at Long Island, where U.S. authorities agreed to lower rates to help sterling, a temporary fix that merely postponed the system's inherent crisis. Thus, the currency regime of 1927 was fundamentally unstable, laying the groundwork for the severe financial strains that would culminate in the UK's forced abandonment of the Gold Standard in 1931.
🌟 Uncommon