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Washington North Wales Halfpenny – 1795

Washington’s “North Wales” Halfpenny and the Odd British Token Economy

In the late 1700s, Americans were still living with an ongoing shortage of small change. Official U.S. copper coinage had only recently begun, and it did not immediately satisfy everyday commercial demand. Across the Atlantic, Britain experienced its own token boom, with private firms and die sinkers producing copper pieces that functioned like practical substitutes for low-denomination coinage. Out of that cross-current came the Washington North Wales Halfpenny, a token struck in Birmingham, England that features a portrait of George Washington.

Although it carries Washington’s image, the North Wales piece was not a United States Mint product and was not an official American coin. Instead, it belongs to the broad family of late 18th-century tokens that blended commerce, politics, and marketing. Pieces like this often circulated where they were struck, but they also traveled, and they later became popular with American collectors because of their subject matter and the persistent early-American theme of “coin substitutes.”

(A [1795] North Wales Halfpenny, Plain edge. Obverse [left], Reverse {right].)

Design, Legends, and the “GEORGEIVS” Misspelling

The most immediate visual feature is the obverse: a left-facing bust of George Washington in a military coat. Around him is an unusual legend rendered in period Roman-style lettering: “GEORGEIVS WASHINGTON”. It’s commonly described as a misspelling (vs. ‘GEORGIVS’), and it also reflects period letterforms where V can substitute for U, making the inscription look odd to modern eyes. In any case, the odd legend is one method of identifying the type.

The reverse centers on a crowned harp. Near the base are small ornaments that vary by variety, described as sixfoils/rosettes on some types and as stars on others. This pairing of Washington on one side and a crowned harp on the other illustrates its transatlantic origins and unusual symbolism. American revolutionary iconography combined with an emblem associated with the British and Irish context is an unexpected mix.

(A [1795] undated North Wales Halfpenny, lettered Edge, Obverse [left], Reverse [Right].)

One commonly discussed attribution places the manufacture in Birmingham and connects the issue to William Lutwyche. Birmingham was a major hub for token production, with skilled engravers and industrial-scale metalworking capacity, so the location fits the broader pattern of the era.

(A [1795] North Wales Halfpenny, with 2 stars on each side of the Harp on the reverse. Obverse [right], Reverse [left].)

Three Varieties and What Separates Them

Collectors generally talk about three main varieties within this North Wales Washington Token grouping.

The first is a copper piece with Washington’s left-facing portrait and the crowned Irish harp reverse, flanked by sixfoils, but without the “NORTH WALES” legend on the reverse. It is undated and undenominated, typical of many tokens that were meant to pass by custom rather than by statute.

The second variety keeps the same obverse but adds “NORTH WALES” above the harp on the reverse, with the tip of the crown acting as a natural divider in the word placement. This variety is associated with an inscribed edge reading “PAYABLE IN LANCASTER LONDON OR BRISTOL”. The edge legend is important because it hints at a redemption network or at least a commercial promise meant to build trust.

The third variety is considered the rarest: undated, undenominated, and with a plain edge. The reverse shows “NORTH WALES” above the crowned harp, with two stars on each side of the base of the harp (four stars total), a key diagnostic for the variety.

Rarity is a recurring theme here. A particularly scarce brass variety is reported. Depending on the reference, survival is estimated at about 10 known examples for the rarest brass issues, though exact counts remain uncertain. That kind of survival estimate, paired with the distinctive legends and edge varieties, is why the North Wales Washington token remains a notable focus within Washingtonia and token collecting.

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