Miscellaneous, John Baliol, First coinage, Sterling, without mint name (probably Berwick), four mullets of six points, 1.07g/3h (SCBI 35, 298ff; B 1ff, fig. 210ff; S 5065); together with an Alexander III, Second coinage Sterling, possibly class D [2]. Fine, first double struck on obverse, second folded in half £100-£150
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Isle of Man Tokens, Douglas, King William’s College, white metal Sixpence, brass Penny, copper Halfpenny, all 26mm, 1.62g, 6.06g, 6.30g (Mackay 158-60; cf. R.J. Ford I, 247) [3]. Good very fine or better £100-£150 --- Provenance: First and third J. Gardiner Collection and DNW Auction 140, 15-16 March 2017, lot 632 (part)
Isle of Man Tokens, Douglas, Percy Towns, Good Luck, aluminium check by J.R. Gaunt inset with 1938 Farthing, 38mm, 7.16g (Quarmby 125; cf. Guard 541); Isle of Man Casino, grey plastic 10 Shillings, 40mm, 8.27g; P.O.W., uniface celluloid Pennies (2) and Halfpennies (2) [6]. Very fine or better £100-£150 --- Provenance: First DNW Auction 132, 15-18 September 2015, lot 410 (part); second J. Gardiner Collection & DNW Auction 140, 15-16 March 2017, lot 637 (part)
Isle of Man Medals, Edward VII, Coronation, 1902, Douglas, medals by Brookes & Adams (2), in copper and white metal, both 37mm (W & E 4137C.1, 4137.2; Quarmby 177-8); Edward VII, Coronation, 1902, Ballacosnahan, Kirkpatrick, a white metal meal by H.B. Sale, 38mm (W & E 4535P.1; Quarmby 176); Edward VII, Coronation, 1902, Ramsey, a white metal medal by H.B. Sale, 38mm (W & E 4545Y.1; Quarmby 175); Centenary of the Peel Wesleyan Sunday School, 1913, an aluminium medal by Vaughton, 37mm (Quarmby 144); George V, Visit to Peel, 1920, a white metal medal, unsigned [by Fattorini], 32mm (W & E 5533A.1) [6]. About very fine or better, all except first pierced £100-£150 --- Provenance: First R. Cain Collection, Spink Auction 145, 12-14 July 2000, lot 2807 (part); first, second, fourth, fifth and sixth DNW Auction 148, 18-20 September 2018, lot 1102 (part); third H.F. Guard Collection, Spink Auction 182, 29 June 2006, lot 558 (part) & DNW Auction 156, 20-21 February 2019, lot 1390 (part)
Jersey Tokens, Victory Inn, Gorey, Charles Whitley, brass, 22mm (McCammon C35J); Epicerie Française, uniface white metal Twenty-Fifth of a Shilling, 30mm (McCammon C68J); Maison de Paris, I. Beghin, decagonal brass, 23mm (McCammon C82Ji); Jersey Animals Shelter, uniface brass, stamped ‘2344’, 26mm; Jersey Wildlife Preservation Trust, 1995, copper-nickel, 28mm; together with a modern fabrication in pewter of a proposed late medieval 5 Sous for Jersey (cf. McCammon p.101) [6]. Varied state, first rare £100-£150 --- Provenance: Second DNW Auction 156, 20-21 February 2019, lot 1311 (part); third, fourth, fifth and sixth DNW Auction 176, 26 May 2020, lot 261 (part)
Jersey Medals, Mrs Malfilatre’s Establishment, a silver award medal, unsigned, named (First Prize Merit, Miss Phillips), rev. (I. Bynam, Professor of Dancing), 37mm. Very fine; with loop for suspension £300-£400 --- Provenance: DNW Auction 137, 21-23 September 2016, lot 444 Mrs Malfilatre’s School, Hemery Place, St Helier, is listed in the Strangers Guide to the Island of Jersey, published in 1833, which also shows an establishment under the charge of a Mme Malfilatre at the Corinthian Hall, New street. The proprietor of one (if not both) establishments was almost certainly Sophie Catherine Charlotte Alphonse Louise Malfilatre, formerly of Calvados, who was listed in the 1841 Census as a governess, aged 40, living at Hemery Place; it appears she was †by February 1853
Jersey Medals, Royal Jersey Golf Club, The ‘Robin’ Prize, a copper award medal by J.S. & A.B. Wyon, un-named, 38mm; C.P. District Championships, 1926, a silver award medal for rugby by Fattorini, named (R. Bailey), hallmarked Birmingham 1926, 38mm; Jersey School of Physical Culture, a silver award medal by W.J. Dingley for C.T. Maine, Jersey, un-named, hallmarked Birmingham 1931, 38mm; Jersey-Laval, 1934, a uniface plated bronze award plaque for boxing by H. Demey, 85 x 63mm; Royal Island of Jersey Militia, a silver award medal for football by F. Phillips, engraved (Jersey v. Guernsey, 1936), 32mm [5]. Varied state, first scratched; two cased £100-£150 --- Provenance: Second DNW Auction 140, 15-16 March 2017, lot 1067 (part); third, fourth and fifth DNW Auction 140, 15-16 March 2017, lot 1068 (part)
Edward III, Pre-Treaty period, Groat, series E, York, 4.57g/9h (N 1164; S 1572); Henry VIII, Second coinage, Halfgroat, York, Sede Vacante, mm. key, 1.31g/12h (N 1806; S 2347) [2]. First fine but marked on face, second better £70-£90 --- Provenance: From the Collection of a Suffolk Detectorist
Henry VI, Annulet issue, Penny, Calais, 0.76g/1h (S 1845); Henry VIII, First coinage, Halfpenny, mm. portcullis on obv. only, 0.29g/10h (S 2334); Charles I, Tower mint, Halfgroat, Gp D, type 3a3, mm. eye, 0.89g/1h (S 2833); SCOTLAND, Charles I, Falconer’s First issue, Twenty Pence, f after rev. legend, 0.82g/10h (S 5588); together with other hammered silver coins (2) [6]. Varied state, fourth pierced £60-£80
Henry VI, Rosette-Mascle issue, Halfgroat, Calais, mascle in two spandrels, 1.72g/11h (S 1863); Philip and Mary, Base Penny, 0.64g/9h (S 2510A); Elizabeth I, Second issue, Halfgroat, mm. martlet, 0.91g/4h; Third issue, Threepence, 1568, mm. coronet, 1.47g/5h; Fifth issue, Threepence, 1578, mm. Greek cross, 1.55g/7h; Sixth issue, Halfgroat, mm. hand, 0.88g/10h; Seventh issue, Halfgroat, mm. 1, 0.89g/1h (S 2557, 2566, 2573, 2579, 2587) [7]. Fair to fine, first clipped £80-£100
Edward IV, Light coinage, Groat, Coventry, class VI, mm. sun, quatrefoils by neck, fleurs on cusps except above crown, c on breast, 2.30g/6h, Halfgroat, Canterbury, class VI/VII, Abp Bourchier, mm. pall on obv. only, wedges by neck and hair, knot on breast, 1.44g/11h (N 1581, 1585; S 2008, 2027) [2]. Both fine, first clipped £60-£80
Henry VII, Facing Bust issue, Halfgroat, Canterbury, class IIIb, King and Abp jointly, mm. lis, rosette stops, 1.71g/6h (S 2210); Charles I, Aberystwyth mint, Groat, mm. book, 1.99g/8h (N 2337; S 2891); Charles II, Third Hammered issue, Halfcrown, 11.85g/11h (S 3321); together with other hammered silver coins (4) [7]. First about very fine, third poor, others varied state £80-£100
Elizabeth I, Second issue, Penny, mm. martlet, 0.55g/1h; Third issue, Sixpence, 1561, mm. pheon, large flan, 2.53g/6h; Fourth issue, Sixpence, 1573, mm. ermine, 2.57g/1h, Threepence, 1574, mm. eglantine, 1.40g/7h; Fifth issue, Threepence, 1582, mm. sword, 1.20g/1h; Sixth issue, Halfgroat, mm. escallop, 0.80g/8h (S 2558, 2560, 2562, 2566, 2574, 2579) [6]. First good fine with a clear portrait, others in varied state £70-£90
Elizabeth I, Third issue, Sixpence, 1568, mm. coronet, 2.80g/6h, Threepences (2), 1566, mm. portcullis, 1.41g/5h, 1568, mm. coronet, 1.31g/12h; Fourth issue, Sixpence, 1572, mm. ermine, 2.46g/3h; Sixth issue, Halfgroat, mm. A, 0.87g/12; Seventh issue, Sixpence, 1602, mm. 2, 2.56g/1h (S 2562, 2565, 2579, 2585); James I, First coinage, Sixpence, 1604, second bust, mm. thistle, 2.72g/2h (S 2648); together with other silver coins of Elizabeth I (2) [9]. Fair to fine £70-£90
James I, First coinage, Sixpence, 1603, mm., thistle, 1.95g/6h, Second coinage, Sixpences (2), 1604, mm. lis, 2.66g/1h, 1610, mm. bell?, 2.52g/6h (S 2647, 2657-8); Charles I, Tower mint, Sixpence, Gp F, mm. triangle, 2.73g/12h, Halfgroat, Gp G, mm. sceptre, 0.89g/6h (S 2817, 2836); together with other silver hammered coins (3) [8]. Poor to fair £60-£80
Anthony C., English Coins: [A] Collection begun in 1879, an extremely detailed handwritten account of the collection of British coins formed by Charles Anthony, from Gallo-Belgic issues down to 1937 type coins of George VI, including rubbings of all coins, details of their provenances and prices paid, 250pp. Half-leather and boards; extremities scuffed, otherwise sound, a fascinating record and unique £300-£500 --- Provenance: Ex libris Charles Anthony Jr, with his bookplate; David Sealy. Charles Anthony Jr formed a considerable collection of coins, beginning in 1879 with the acquisition of a Charles I shilling, mm. harp, for 3/6 from a “Dealer, Drawbridge, Bristol” and a 1708 shilling for half a crown from a “Dealer, Triangle, Bristol”. During the early 1880s he was acquiring coins from the likes of the pawnbroker and jeweller Abraham Myer in Hereford, F. Redfern & Co in Peterborough, James Verity in Dewsbury and particularly Robert Sadd Jr (1815-94), a second-generation Cambridge jeweller, from whom he bought a considerable range of coins in 1884. By 1885 he had discovered the London dealers, becoming an occasional purchaser from Lincoln down to 1927, while his first acquisitions from the then-new firm of Spink, at 2 Gracechurch street, namely extremely fine crowns of 1720 and 1739 for £2 each, were made in 1886. Visits to un-named dealers in Wardour street and Charing Cross at the same time yielded further pieces. During the 1890s occasional coins were acquired from circulation in the year of issue, but apart from new issues acquired from banks at the time, between 1900 and 1920 the only purchase appears to have been an oval countermarked dollar, bought in Buenos Aires in 1906 for the equivalent of eight shillings. Commencing again in 1920, Anthony proceeded to expand the collection with purchases from Spink and Baldwin and, from 1935, from Seaby; the latest acquisitions from all three firms were made in July and August 1947. The Buenos Aires connection yielded a Richard III groat, which cost 4/6 in 1927, and preceded Anthony’s most active decade, the 1930s, when he acquired large numbers of coins from the major London dealers and participated directly in several Glendining auctions, including the Drabble and Waite Sanderson sales. His collection was housed in three cabinets, one of which, made in Kingswood c. 1739, was made for George Montgomerie of Thundersley (1712-66). The collection was bought by Seaby in either late 1947 or early 1948 and first marketed by them in February 1948; some of the gold coins from it were acquired by Major William Tapp, MC, a portion of whose collection was sold in these rooms in March 2017
Ceylon, V.O.C., Stuiver, undated, Negapatnam (Sch. 1244); Stuiver, wreath type, no mint or date (Sch. 1290); Stuiver, 1783, Colombo (Sch. 1296); 2 Stuivers, 1783, Galle (Sch. 1334c); Stuiver, 1792, Trincomalee (Sch. 1351); British Administration, Twelfth-Rixdollar, 1805 (Prid. 36) [6]. Varied state, first scarce £100-£150
Miscellaneous, First World War, a set of seven gold coins, comprising: AUSTRIA, Franz Joseph I, 20 Corona, 1915 (KM. 2818); FRANCE, Third Republic, 20 Francs, 1908 (KM. 857); GERMANY (Prussia), Wilhelm II, 20 Marks, 1913a (KM. 537); GREAT BRITAIN, George V, Sovereign, 1911 (S 3996); ITALY, Victor Emanuel III, 100 Lire, 1931r, yr IX (KM. 72); RUSSIA, Nicholas II, 10 Roubles, 1899 (KM. Y64); USA, Five Dollars, 1911 (KM. 129) [7]. Very fine or better; in modern fitted case £2,400-£3,000
Miscellaneous, Denmark, Christian IX, Krone, 1892cs, Copenhagen (Hede 14A; KM. 797.1); Germany, HAMBURG, 4 Schillings, 1797ohk (KM. 512); Switzerland, FREIBURG, 5 Batzen, 1828 (HMZ 285e; KM. 84) [3]. First with light graffiti behind head, all extremely fine or better, lightly cleaned £100-£120
A George III Irish Regimental silver Fiddle pattern straining spoon, 8th Garrison Battalion, by John Power, Dublin 1806, the bowl with a fixed strainer, the terminal engraved with a crown above 8 GB Mess', length 33cm, approx. weight 5,1oz. Formed in Ireland on 25 December 1806, this was one of nine such Garrison Battalions. it consisted of between 600 and 1000 men, and was organized into ten companies. The first appointed commanding officer was Lt. Col. Joseph Gubbins. Its HQ was at Parsonstown, King's County. On the 24 March, 8th Garrison was disbanded.
A set of six George III Irish Regimental silver Fiddle pattern tablespoons, 8th Garrison Battalion, by Tudor and Whitford, Dublin 1807, the terminals engraved with a crown above 8 GB Mess', length 22.2cm, approx. weight 11.4oz. Formed in Ireland on 25 December 1806, this was one of nine such Garrison Battalions. it consisted of between 600 and 1000 men, and was organized into ten companies. The first appointed commanding officer was Lt. Col. Joseph Gubbins. Its HQ was at Parsonstown, King's County. On the 24 March, 8th Garrison was disbanded.
A small collection of six 18th century silver wine labels, comprising: one by Richard Binley, London circa 1760, rectangular form, feather edge border, incised 'WHITE.WINE', plus one of cartouche form, by Sandilands Drinkwater, incised 'WHITE.WINE', plus two further cartouche labels, incised 'CLARET' and 'WHITE', a shaped label, by Margaret Binley, incised 'WHISKEY', and a plain label incised 'WHITE.WINE', approx. weight 2.3oz. (6) Provenance: The Dr. Tony Saunders Collection of Wine Labels. The Richard Binley Label was the first wine label purchased by Tony Saunders. It was from S.J. Shrubsole, Museum Street, London, on the 24 June 1966.

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596780 item(s)/page