Please rephrase your question. The U.S. uses cents, not pence. And England didn't start using "new pence" until 1968.
Maybe one dollar to a collector.
50 pence.
The US didn't print any bills dated 1954. Please check again and post a new question
The US didn't print any bills dated 1954. Please check again and post a new question.
The US didn't print any bills dated 1954. Please check again and post a new question.
The US didn't print any bills dated 1954. Please check again and post a new, separate question.
The US didn't print any bills dated 1954. Please check again and post a new question.
The US didn't print any bills dated 1954. Please check again and post a new, separate question.
It's worth 50 pence, which currently converts to 70 cents in US dollars.
There's no such coin as a "pence". The word is the plural of penny in the British coinage system, so "a pence" would be like saying "one feet".In any case the penny is the smallest denomination; as of 04/2013 it's equivalent to about 1.6 US cents.
About 5 pence take it or leave it
Please check your bill again and post a new, separate question. The US didn't print any bills dated 1954.