British farthings were made of bronze, not silver. Check that coin again.
Modified coins have little or no collector value.
Farthings were not minted from silver, only bronze in 1901. If you have a silver Farthing it would be because somebody has plated it. Modified coins have no collector value.
Farthings were made from bronze. If you have a silver Farthing, somebody has plated it and it is subsequently of no value as a collectible.
There were no $1 silver certificates with series 1937 for the year.
There were no $1 silver certificates with series 1937 for the year.
The image on a British Farthing was - From 1937 to 1956, it was a wren. From 1672 to 1937, it was various representations of Britannia.
British Farthings were never minted in silver, and no Farthings were minted from 1808 to 1820 inclusive.
Modified coins have no collector value.
A farthing was 1/4 of a penny.
There is no such thing as an 1890 silver farthing, as there were no Victorian silver farthings ever made (the only silver farthings I'm aware of are those struck by hand in the 1100-1400s!). If you mean an 1890 farthing, they run about $1-2 in circulated condition and about $10 if in great shape. However, if your coin is silver looking, chances are it is plated and therefore considered to be damaged to coin collectors, putting your coin in the range of about $1-2 or so regardless of condition.
The last British Farthing was minted in 1956.
No Buffalo nickels were ever made from silver. 1937 is one of the most common, value is 25 cents to $3.00 for circulated coins.
The farthing was last produced in Great Britain in 1956.