A ha'penny, short for "half-penny," is a coin that was historically worth half of a penny in British currency. It was used in the United Kingdom before the decimalization of currency in 1971, when the penny was divided into 100 new pence. The ha'penny coin was often made of copper and featured various designs throughout its history. Today, it is considered a numismatic item, as it is no longer in circulation.
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just 1 p
50 pence.
Such a coin does not exist. The 5 and 10 New Pence coins were first introduced in 1968. The 50 New Pence coins were first introduced in 1969. The 1/2, 1 and 2 New Pence coins were first introduced in 1971.
On "Decimal Day" in 1971, Ten Shillings converted to 50 New Pence. Ten Shillings was equal to 120 old Pence.
Prior to decimalisation in 1971 a Shilling was one twentieth of a Pound. At decimalisation, the Shilling converted to 5 New Pence.
3 cents
2 pence
It's worth maybe 1.5 pence for the copper.
It's worth about three cents for the copper.
It's worth nearly two pence for the copper.
Before the British currency reform, there were 12 pence in a shilling, and 20 shillings in a pound, so there were 240 pence in a pound. That system was dropped in 1971, when the UK converted to "new pence" (worth 2.4 old pence), making 100 new pence per pound. The shilling was replaced with a 5 new pence coin (worth the same amount as the former shilling, 1/20th of a pound).
10 Pence GBP in 1976 had the purchasing power of about £0.50 GBP today.