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1 Penny Worcestershire - Birmingham / Workhouse

1 Penny (Worcestershire - Birmingham / Workhouse) - obverse1 Penny (Worcestershire - Birmingham / Workhouse) - reverse

© ZacUK

Features

Issuer United Kingdom
Type Emergency coinage › Merchant tokens
Year 1812
Value 1 Penny (1⁄240)
Currency Pound sterling (1158-1971)
Composition Copper
Weight 28.54 g
Diameter 37 mm
Thickness 2.8 mm
Shape Round
Technique Milled
Orientation Coin alignment ↑↓
Demonetized 15 October 1831
Number
N#
81402
References Withers# 398
Paul Withers, Bente R. Withers; 2010. The Token Book / Volume 1. 17th 18th & 19th Century Tokens and their Values. Galata, Llanfyllin, United Kingdom.
, Davis# 39
William John Davis; 1904. The Nineteenth Century Token Coinage of Great Britain, Ireland, the Channel Islands, and the Isle of Man: To which are added tokens of over one penny value of any period. Spink & Son, London, United Kingdom.

Obverse

West view of the Workhouse, with date below. Lettering above and below, beaded border.

Script: Latin

Lettering:
BIRMINGHAM
1812
ONE PENNY

Reverse

Shield in centre. Legend in two lines both above and below, beaded border.

Script: Latin

Lettering:
ONE POUND NOTE FOR 240 TOKENS
PAYABLE AT THE WORKHOUSE

Edge

Central diagonal milling

1 Penny (Worcestershire - Birmingham / Workhouse) -  obverse

© ZacUK

Comments

Birmingham Workhouse (Warwickshire) copper penny token dated 1812.
The Birmingham Workhouse for the Overseers of the Poor was located in Lichfield Street, Birmingham and accommodated 600 paupers and children at its peak.

 The Workhouse, Birmingham, Warwickshire. Up to 1834:
On 3rd April 1734, a meeting was held and orders given for the purchasing of a site and building of a workhouse for the parish of Birmingham (Dent, 1893). The workhouse was erected soon afterwards on land between Lichfield Street and Steelhouse Lane, where Coleridge Passage now stands. The building cost £1,173 and was intended to accommodate 600. Later extensions included an infirmary wing at the left erected in 1766 at a cost of £400, and a workshop wing at the right erected in 1779 at a cost of £1,100.
 In 1783, Birmingham was incorporated under a local Act of Parliament, giving it greater powers over the management of poor relief. The Incorporation was managed by a body of 108 Guardians of the Poor and was enabled to set up a workhouse "with Apartments for the sick and diseased, and for the old, impotent and infirm, and for those able to work, for the carrying on divers Trades, Works, and Manufactures, as also for the Punishment of the idle, refractory, and profligate". In fact, the Incorporation appears to have continued using the existing parish workhouse building for a further 70 years. By 1848, it could accommodate 645 inmates and was generally full.
 In 1789, Josiah Robins, a worsted maker in Digbeth, was given permission to set up a workshop in premises adjoining the workhouse, and to employ the inmates. Their earnings were paid each week to the workhouse governor. Some inmates, who were deemed capable, were appointed as instructors and supervisors and given separate accommodation at the workhouse.
 From around 1812, during a national shortage of coins, Birmingham was one of several workhouses to issue workhouse tokens - specially minted coins given as poor relief. Local shopkeepers could then redeem the tokens at the workhouse. This example, from 1812, features a picture of the Incorporation workhouse, and the wording "ONE POUND NOTE PAYABLE AT THE WORKHOUSE FOR 240 TOKENS".

See also

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Date VG F VF XF AU UNC
1812  $ 12 $ 12

Values in the table above are expressed in USD. They are based on evaluations by Numista users and sales realized on Internet platforms. They serve as an indication only; they are not intended to be relied upon for buying, selling or exchanging. Numista does not buy or sell coins or banknotes.

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