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1799 George III Farthing Coins IndexChard 24 Carat Home Page

Obverse of 1799 George III Farthing
Obverse of 1799 Farthing
With Date 1799 Below Bust

Reverse of 1799 George III Farthing
Reverse of 1799 Farthing
With 1 FARTHING Below

1799 George III Farthing
The copper Farthing was introduced during the Reign of Charles II (1660-1684) to supply demand for legal-tender small change. In spite of this, the Royal Mint was often reluctant to strike these coins because they were difficult to strike profitably.
By the time George III came to the throne in 1760, the Royal Mint's equipment was becoming decrepit and they become even more reluctant to mint low-value coins with their outdated and ill-used machinery. Between 1775 and 1799, no regal farthings were minted at all, despite an increasing need for coinage to pay workers wages due the industrial revolution taking place at the time. In the face of government indifference and Royal Mint incompetance, merchants and other 'entrepreneurs' resorted to supplying the need for small change with forgeries and unofficial tokens, which by the 1790s, outnumbered the regal issues then in circulation by a considerable margin.

The Farthing of 1799 was not struck by the Royal Mint, but under contract by Matthew Boulton at the Soho Mint in Birmingham. Further issues were produced in 1806 and 1807, but it was not until 1821, under the reign of George IV, that farthings issued by the Royal Mint started to be issued again on a reasonably regular basis, using minting equipment that had been purchased from Boulton's Soho Manufactory.

Obverse
Draped and laureate bust of George III facing right.
GEORGIUS DEI GRATIA REX
1799

Reverse:
The reverse features Britannia, seated left, holding a branch and trident, holding out olive branch.
The legend reads:-
BRITANNIA
1 FARTHING

Availability and Prices
DateGradeAvailablePrice £Price $
1799AskaUnc£150$Ask

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