A Conversation for Old English Money

Confused

Post 1

Researcher 248419

I found this article very helpful, but I'm confused on one point. The author states that Coppers, Tickies and Joeys are 1d, 3d and 4d respectively. However, George Orwell writes (actually it's more implied) in his novel Keep the Aspidistra Flying (the reason I was reading this article in the first place) that a Joey is a threepenny piece (not 4d as the article states):

"He knew the precise sum that was there. Fivepence halfpenny?twopence halfpenny and a Joey. He paused, took out the miserable little threepenny-bit, and looked at it."

Could someone kindly confirm this?
Thanks!


Confused

Post 2

Wand'rin star

You're quite right. By the time Orwell was writing the 4d piece had long been discontinued and the name transferred to 3d (what I would call a "tickey")When 4d pieces did exist, they were called groats and still appear(ed) in the Maundy Money the queen dishes out to old people every year as the remnants of a very old charity.smiley - starsmiley - star


Confused

Post 3

Wand'rin star

You're quite right. By the time Orwell was writing the 4d piece had long been discontinued and the name transferred to 3d (what I would call a "tickey")When 4d pieces did exist, they were called groats and still appear(ed) in the Maundy Money the queen dishes out to old people every year as the remnants of a very old charity.smiley - starsmiley - star


Confused

Post 4

Researcher 248419

Thanks very much! This article, as well as the entire site, is a wealth of interesting information. Keep up the good work!


Key: Complain about this post

Write an Entry

"The Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy is a wholly remarkable book. It has been compiled and recompiled many times and under many different editorships. It contains contributions from countless numbers of travellers and researchers."

Write an entry
Read more