Queen Elizabeth And British Money

Hey, I have one of those! Are they valuable?

We still have the old king on most of our small-denomination notes, although oddly the big bills have the new guy on them. Go figure.

When Hirohito died after 62 years on the throne, they just made his old birthday “Greenery Day” and made the new Emperor’s birthday a new holiday. It would have screwed up the (by-now) traditional Golden Week holidays to have gotten rid of it.

Your post containes too many ‘face-value’ references to not be some kind of awful pun, correct? Is British currency’s value in any way related to the value of the face of the monarch that appears on it, with the ugly ones worth a little less?

One of the Scottish banks still issues them, I think. They don’t have a picture of the monarch on them, however.

Yeah, sure, I’ve thought about that, but the thing is the next person in line is not thought very well of and may indeed be so egotistical that it would gall him no end not to have his birthday celebrated in the exact same manner. I predict some sort of keruffle.

At least the British won’t have to change their calender epoch when the Queen dies.

Surely he’ll at least change the name of the holiday to King’s Day. :wink:

[Johnny Carson] I did not know that! [/Johnny Carson]

We had a debate about this here in Ireland, post independence. Serious consideration was given to going around and chiselling out all the VRs,E(VII)s,etc.

Ultimately they were left alone, on the presumption that the post boxes themselves would be replaced, by and by. As it happens, the nearest post box to my home is still a VR. They built those things to last.

As I understand it*, legally, yes the national holiday will change, but I’m sure some compromise will be reached, maybe like the aforementioned “Greenery Day” solution.

(Here in Canada, Queen Vicky’s birthday (May 24) has been the "official birthday of the Queen (or, presumably, King) since round about 1901. So, whether the ruling monarch has his or her birthday in good weather or not (part of the reason the official birthday isn’t always celebrated near the real birthday) it’s ensured to be so in Canada. I think we (or at least the government) has a hard on for Victoria because she was Queen when we were offered independence (well, what we were offered in 1867 wasn’t that much different from what we had in 1866, but July 1, 1867 is the date in national mythos that we came to be, although it could be argued that our independence didn’t really fully come until 1982).

  • note that I’ve never been anywhere near Thailand, I just like learning about things like this.

Oooh, anthems, my favourite topic, and something I’m considered a leading world’s expert on! I hope that you sent him to my site (it does mention there what the slight changes to the wording of the anthem is when a male is the soverign, not just the changing of “Queen” to “King”.

Hello Good people, I remember in the late '60’s and early 70’s that it wasn’t uncommon to see Penny coins dating back to Queen Victoria. It’s only since the change to decimalization that all the coinage changed once and for all.
Peter (London, U.K.)

I wish it were that clear here, but it’s not.

The two nearest me are also VR.

I think that’s just a matter of the amount of time elapsed in both cases. Seeing a Queen Victoria coin in 1970 would be equivalent to seeing a coin from 1940 today (a George VI coin, in other words) — certainly not unheard of.

Got one in my change yesterday - they’re pretty rare nowadays.

It’s from the Royal Bank of Scotland, has Lord Ilay (the first governor) on the front and Edinburgh Castle on the back. No mention of Queen Liz on it anywhere or, as far as I’m aware, on any Scottish banknotes.

But if you see any George VI coins in circulation in the UK, it’s by mistake. All pre-decimal copper and brass coinage became obsolete in the 1970s; all sixpences and half-crowns disappeared in the 1980s; all shillings and two-shillings, formerly doing duty as 5p and 10p coins, went out of circulation in the early 1990s when the 5p and 10p were resized. Rarely, a pre-decimal shilling might be circulating in mistake for a 10p coin which is approximately the same size; it’s a little less likely that a 6d would be mistaken for a modern 5p; I have one farthing in my wallet which was presumably mistaken for a decimal penny (the size is similar). No pre-decimal coinage is intentionally still in circulation today.

Trivia: in the village of Tobermory, on the Isle of Mull, there is not one but two E (VIII) R pillar boxes. As we call the red, freestanding mailboxes.

You can see one in Google Streetview, unfortunately not with enough clarity to make out the insignia.

And another one outside a pub in Winchester, not far from where I live. (Not my photo)

There are still several VR boxes around the streets of Sydney too.

In the US, President Lincoln died 145 years ago. But coins with his image can still be found in circulation.