Thursday, May 12, 2016

1933 Penny reached a price of £72,000

A 1933 Pattern Penny smashed through the World Record for a copper or bronze coin sold at auction (according to Baldwin press release). The coin, one of only four Patterns ever made, garnered bids from all over the world, and was finally wheedled down to just two telephone bidders who went toe-to-toe for over five minutes before the hammer came down on a price of £72,000 (US$104,470) in Baldwins’ auction room on 4th May 2016.


According to my blog record, a 1792 Birch Cent hold the World Record for the most expensive penny and copper or bronze coin sold at auction.

1933 Penny

The currency version of the 1933 Penny is well documented, but the Pattern version sold on Wednesday 4th May is even rarer. In 1932 the Royal Mint had a surplus of pennies, so no more currency versions were produced. In fact, only seven pennies with the 1933 date were minted for ceremonial and record purposes.

The Standing Committee on Coins Medals and Decorations decided in late 1931 to re-design the penny, with the likeness of George V the key development. A sculptor and medallic artist from France by the name of Andre Lavrillier was recruited to design the coin, and his Patterns were presented to the committee in December 1932.

They were met with some resistance, with the committee feeling that the new designs were not of superior quality to the existing product. Whilst Lavrillier would go on to design a number of coins for the French mint (coins that were still in use as late as 1969), his designs for the 1933 penny were dismissed, leaving only in existence the four patterns presented to the committee.

Of these four, one is held in the Royal Mint Museum, whilst the other three are in private hands – hence why when one such example comes up for sale it is an important numismatic event.

This was shown by the immense interest in this particular coin – Baldwin’s received requests from as far afield as Australia, United States, New Zealand, with potential bidders flying in from all over the world to view the auction live. For most of those hopeful arrivals, however, it was to ultimately end in disappointment, as the coin was sold to a private collector for a price that was out of reach for most everyday collectors.

This World Record joins a number of such records held by Baldwin’s, which include the Hong Kong Gold Proof Dollar (£222,200) and the most expensive Ancient Greek Coin ever sold at auction, the Pantikapaion Gold Stater which sold in 2012 for $3.2 Million at our auction in New York, as well as the most expensive modern Greek coin, the 1876 100 Drachma selling for £216,000 in 2014; the highest value Australian coin, the 1920 Sydney Sovereign selling for £780,000; and the world record for a British coin with the Edward VIII gold Proof Sovereign selling for £516,000 in 2014.

Source: Baldwin's