There was an unknown number of 1933 British Pennies minted.
Seven are known to exist. Two are in museums, three in private collections, one under a foundation stone at the University of London building, and one stolen from the foundation stone of the Church of St. Cross, current whereabouts not known.
CAUTION - There have been several attempts at forgery of this coin by skilled craftsmen.
Authentication and verification of such coins is vital to avoid expensive and embarassing mistakes.
There were 654,564,000 British 1967 Pennies minted.
There were 654,564,000 British Pennies minted with a date of 1967. It should be noted that unspecified quantities of British Pennies were also minted in 1968, 1969 and 1970, but were all dated 1967. These are included in the total.
There were 26,977,000 British 1902 Pennies minted.
The Royal Mint advises that 469,207,800 British Pennies were minted in 2009.
There were 29,098,000 1930 British Pennies minted.
The 1923 Australian Halfpenny are relatively rare because there were only 15,000 minted.
There were 154,296,000 King George V 1936 British Pennies minted. There were no 1936 King Edward VIII British coins minted since he abdicated before the coins could be prepared.
The King's Norton Metal Company Birmingham (KN) minted many British copper and bronze coins over a period of years. No British coins were minted from 1920 onwards, but they continued to mint coins for other countries. There were only 7 or 8 British 1933 Pennies minted by the Royal Mint London and none of them were released into circulation.
US Indian Head cents: 2,740 proofs and 57,182,854 for circulation. British Pennies: 15,331,000.
There were 56,070,000 British 1935 King George V Pennies minted.
The English Penny dates back well over one thousand years and there are far too many rare Pennies to list here. The most spectacularly rare British Pennies in more recent times would be the 1933, 1952 and 1954 Pennies. There are seven 1933 British Pennies known to exist and two of them are in museums. There was one only 1952 British Penny minted, which is safely held in the British Museum. There was one only 1954 British Penny minted, which is safely held in the British Museum, but somebody claimed to have found a second coin in 2006. All three coins are valued in the tens of thousands of Pounds. See the links below for a little more detail.
The Royal Mint advises that in 2008, 180,600,000 Pennies of the old (Ironside) design were minted and, 386,830,000 Pennies of the new (Dent) design were minted. A total of 567,430,000 Pennies for 2008.