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1951 Festival Of Britain Crown George VI Silver Coin

1951 Festival Of Britain Crown George VI Silver Coin Reverse

Buy a 1951 Festival Of Britain Crown George VI Silver Coin

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A 1951 George VI Festival Crown. Britain emerged from the embers of the Second World War in need of healing and rebuilding. In 1951, the government sought to boost the national mood with a mark of Britain's recovery and increasingly flourishing outputs- an event called the Festival of Britain- for which this cupronickel Crown was struck. The obverse holds George VI by Humphrey Paget, a highly revered design among numismatists and collectors. On the reverse resides a likewise admired design: Benedetto Pistrucci’s St George and the Dragon. The second, and last, commemorative Crown of George VIs reign is struck in cupronickel to a 38.61 millimetre diameter and 28.28 gram gross weight. We offer this pre-owned UK coin in great condition, protectively packaged for its safe arrival to your collection.
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Buy a collectable George VI Crown, struck by the Royal Mint to celebrate the post WW2 'Festival of Britain' in London. 

Obverse Of The 1951 Festival Crown

Bearing Humphrey Paget's George VI, widely regarded as among the finest coinage effigies of the 20th century. The sculpture, which was designed in little more than a month following the abdication of Edward VIII, is joined the by the text: 'GEORGIVS  VI  D : G : BR : OMN : REX'. 

Reverse Of The 1951 George VI Crown

Benedetto Pistrucci’s muscular St George and the Dragon masterwork adorns the reverse with the '1951' date insterted below. 

What Are 1951 Crown Coins Made Of?

Crowns of this period are made from cupronickel, not silver. The Royal Mint stopped using silver to make regular UK coinage in 1947. Cupronickel is the same hard-wearing alloy used to produce many coins in your change today.

Are 1951 Festival Crowns Legal Tender?

Originally, 1951 Crowns were worth 5 Shillings when they were issued to celebrate Britain's post-war bounceback from austerity. Later, these coins were redenominated at 25p. These coins are now technically legal tender - being a UK decimal currency - but you will find it difficult to spend them in shops or exchange them at most banks.

Buying Pre-Owned UK Crown Coins

Like many older British coins, these collectable 1951 Crowns may show signs of handling or tarnishing. Our expert numismatists carefully select the highest-quality examples for you to add to your collection, with each 1951 Crown carefully authenticated and graded Very Fine (VF) or better.

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