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1652 New England Shilling (Proofed) Sold price: $250,000 “New England Shillings are among the simplest, most valuable and rarest of all U.S. Colonial coins,” according to Professional Coin ...
The scarcity of coin currency was a problem for the growth of the New England economy. On May 27, 1652, the Massachusetts General Court appointed John Hull, a local silversmith, to be Boston's mint master without notifying or seeking permission from the British government. Coins were issued in denominations of 3 and 6 pence and 1 shilling.
1652 pine tree shilling. Early American currency went through several stages of development during the colonial and post-Revolutionary history of the United States.John Hull was authorized by the Massachusetts legislature to make the earliest coinage of the colony (the willow, the oak, and the pine tree shilling) in 1652.
The shillings nearly all bore the date "1652". This was the date of the Massachusetts Bay Colony legislation sanctioning the production of shillings. The date was maintained by the Massachusetts moneyers in order to appear to be in compliance with English law that reserved the right of produce shillings to the Crown, since, in 1652, England was ...
The mid-17th century New England shilling is thought to have been struck in 1652 and will be put up for auction next month. The mid-17th century New England shilling is thought to have been struck ...
A rare 17th Century coin sold at auction for a record-breaking $2.52 million eight years after it was found in an old cabinet.
John Hull was born on December 18, 1624, in Market Harborough, Leicestershire, England, [1] the son of blacksmith Robert Hull and Elizabeth Storer. [2] [3] At age eleven, he immigrated to the Massachusetts Bay Colony with his father, mother, and half-brother Richard Storer, [1] departing Bristol on September 28, 1635, and arriving in Boston on November 7. [4]
Its contents include newspaper pages of the period and coins including a 1652 pine tree shilling. There was also a silver plate, probably engraved by Revere, and a copper medal depicting George Washington. The objects were placed on display for a time. [3]