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School's were not free until the end of the Victorian era in 1891.
there is no such thing as a Doll but there is a thing called a Dollar it is quite rare and is only found in places not very advansed
There is a reference in a Sherlock Holmes story. A poor or working class person paid a couple pence a week to a landlord (pub keeper) and around Christmas, they would receive a goose. Sort of a Victorian/Edwardian "Christmas Club." There are 240 pence in pound. During that period, 1£ = about $11. If someone gives 2 bob a week for 52 weeks, it would come out to about 5 shillings. I don't know what a goose would cost then! Maybe the pub keeper got a deal buying in bulk or "invested" the money during slower times in the year to make it worth the trouble?
1penny for the pit, 6 pence for the gallery seats and 1 shilling for the Gentlemen's room.
There were several types of money that were used in the Tudor times Currency included shillings, pence, and the pound.
hello
about £9,999,99
600000000
about 2-3 dolers
a lot depending if you were poor and not so much if you were filthy rich
It costed 4 shillings for milk and 6 shillings for shoes. It also cost 4 shillings for a loaf of bread.
it cost alot
iink it cost 50 quid for a sleeper car, 10 quid for a seat car and 100 quid for a luxorious car
School's were not free until the end of the Victorian era in 1891.
every day but they were payed about a couple of pence because things cost less in those days
It wouldn't cost anything because it wasn't built. The first car was German in or about 1890. The first American car was about 1903.
Victorian glass costs a few hundred dollars. The cost really depends on the quality of the glass and how big the glass is. The bigger the glass the more it will cost.