A British 1730 Halfpenny, circulated but still in good condition, might fetch anything from £12 to £325 GBP.
A British 1730 Halfpenny (GEOGIVS error), circulated but still in good condition, might fetch anything from £20 to £425 GBP.
A British 1730 Halfpenny (stop after date), circulated but still in good condition, might fetch anything from £20 to £350 GBP.
A British 1730 Halfpenny (no stop after REX), circulated but still in good condition, might fetch anything from £25 to £425 GBP.
A reputable coin dealer will be able to give a more accurate valuation.
NOTE - The reverse of these coins is upside down to the obverse. This is normal.
There were no 1830 British Halfpennies minted.
There were no 1832 British Halfpennies minted.
Any Halfpenny coins circulating in Gibraltar in 1917 would have been British Halfpenny coins.
There were no British Halfpennies minted from 1828 to 1830 inclusive.
Such a coin does not exist. In the event that somebody did produce a gold Halfpenny, it would be worth whatever the current bullion value of gold is.
British coins issued in 1734 were - Gold - Two Guineas, Guinea, Half-Guinea. Silver - Crown, Halfcrown, Shilling, Sixpence. Copper - Halfpenny, Farthing. All coins featured King George II on the obverse.
Halfpenny - British decimal coin - was created in 1971.
A British 1734 Shilling, circulated but still in good condition, might fetch anything from £35 to £650 GBP. A reputable coin dealer will be able to give a more accurate valuation.
Such a coin does not exist. Canada has not used the British sterling currency system since the mid-19th century. If the coin has no country name on it and has a sailing ship on the reverse, it would be a British Halfpenny.
The Royal Mint did not produce any Halfpennies from 1808 to 1824 inclusive.
Such a coin does not exist. Canada has not used the British sterling currency system since the mid-19th century, and has never issued a Halfpenny or half cent coin since Confederation. If the coin has no country name on it and has a sailing ship on the reverse, it would be a British Halfpenny. Alternatively, you may have a privately minted Halfpenny token.
Such a coin does not exist. Canada has not used the British sterling currency system since the mid-19th century, and has never issued a Halfpenny or half cent coin since Confederation. If the coin has no country name on it and has a sailing ship on the reverse, it would be a British Halfpenny. Alternatively, you may have a privately minted Halfpenny token.