It would be a 1937 British Halfpenny, featuring King George VI on the obverse and Sir Francis Drakes ship, the Golden Hind on the reverse.
1937 was the first year George VI and the new sailing ship design appeared on British Halfpenny coins.
The coins are made from bronze, are 26mm in diameter, weigh 5.7 grams, and there were 24,504,000 minted.
They are neither rare nor valuable.
It is a British Penny and a US coin cut in half and stuck to each other. It has no value.
This depends on how exactly it was made, the quality of the workmanship and the style. It may be a coronation piece, do you have any history behind it? Can you link a photo of the piece you are interested in? If you're selling, I'd be interested in viewing it.
You would need to know the condition and denomination (farthing, half penny, penny, three pence, six pence, shilling, 2 shilling, or 2 1/2 shilling) of the coin to be able to get an estimated value.
You are probably asking about a South African coin dated 1950. The value would depend on the specific denomination to which you are referring (farthing, half penny, penny, threepence, sixpence, shilling, two shilling, 2 1/2 shilling or 5 shilling) and its condition.
Such a coin does not exist. The last New Zealand Halfpenny was minted in 1965 and only Britain produced a "Half New Penny" coin.
The design on the reverse of the Half New Penny coin was a crown.
It depends on which coin it is. Half Penny, penny, threepence, shilling, sixpence...they all have different values.
The 1937 Walking Liberty Half dollar is a very common high mintage coin. Most show heavy wear with retail values at $18.00-$30.00 depending on the grade.
Double check that date. The last year half cents were minted was 1857.
All coins from the British Empire have that motto. Please post a new question with your coin's denomination and the country, if it's given. If the coin does not show a country name it's from the U.K.
No such coin exists, the last US half cents were made in 1857.
Check that coin again. Canada didn't half a halfpenny in 1949.