History of Stratford, West Ham, Canning Town, Silvertown etc & lots of historical London Pubs

The Stratford, West Ham and surronding areas site is updated regularly. The sites purpose is to document the history of part of East London that is now generally thought of as London. Enjoy.


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The English Currency system before going decimal about 1969.

At school, prior to the 1970's. the recommendation was to learn the 12 times tables - why?

Well, prior to the English sterling Pound moving decimal, i.e 100 pennies in a Pound, it was a little different, well actually very different.

Before this time, there was the Pound sterling, which is approximately worth about two American Dollars these days, maybe a little less. The Pound sterling still exists, although it is about time we joined the European Community and adopted the Euro, which is currently about 3 Euros for 2 Pounds, and is pretty stable.

Before decimalisation, instead of 100 pennies in a pound, we had 240 old pennies in a pound!

The Pounds , Shillings & Pence story:-

The Pound sterling was very simply worth 20 shillings, each shilling was worth 12 pennies. So, there were 240 pennies in the pound. Just to make it even more confusing, there were halfpennies and farthings. The latter being a quarter of a penny. So, there were nearly a thousand farthings in a pound. [When I was a young lad, I could buy several sweets for a farthing]. If I had a Pound, I could have purchased several thousand small sweets for a Pound!!! We are talking about the 1960's, not the Victorian times, by the way.

To make matters even more confusing, although a little before my time, there was a Guinea, which was worth 21 shillings - I have no idea why this ever existed, and was generally the time when money  was made in gold, 22 carat.

The gold standard existed up until the early 1900's, maybe up until the World wars, and this meant that a Pound really was a Pound, in the form of an eight gram coin of 22ct gold called a sovereign. Gold is purest as 24 carat, so 22 cart is 0.916 pure gold. The silver coinage was made in sterling silver [92.5 % pure silver until 1919, and thereafter until 1946 in 50% silver]. A typical £100 pounds [£ meaning pound weighed about 11 Kilograms].

A quarter of a pound was better known as a Crown (five shillings), a silver coin.

In the Silver Boom in the early 1980s when Russia invaded Afghanistan, an American guy by the name of Bunker Hunt made an attempt to take over the silver market, and force the price up. This forced the price of silver to magnify overnight and for a period of months. The Gold price was also greatly exaggerated during this period, and reached  significant high levels that have not been attained since. The price of gold reached about $800 USA dollars per troy ounce, and silver was probably fifty times its current levels. Silver is now classified as a Base Metal, whereas it was often classified as a semi-precious metal.

In the reformations of Europe, when the Protestants were being forced from the continent by the Catholics, many Huegenot Silver workers moved to the East Anglian regions of England, e.g Suffolk. These skilled silver workers were originally known as the Oesterlings, from which the word Sterling comes from.

The common symbols for the pound, shilling and pence were -

  £  = Pound Sterling

  s  = Shilling [sometimes shown as /-]

 d  = Pence

so, for example £11 4s 6d - means 11 pounds, 4 shillings and six pence.

[remember, 6d was 6 pennies, which was half a shilling, and for which a 6d existed as a coin]

I have found a few good sites on the web, but this site is magnificent - for pictures, I cannot guarantee the site, as I do not know it - browse their coins

 

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I get hundreds of emails every day, fortunately most 'spam mails' are deleted by my mail scan settings. The final emails are delivered to various email addresses, and replying to these are not always successful. If you do not hear from me in a timely fashion, please feel free to email again, I do not mind! This is a pure PUBS history site, I doubt if I know where the PUBS are NOW, but try the site for where they were a hundred years ago, again enjoy!
Once you have discovered enough history of Essex; why not study to undergraduate or postgraduate level in Computer Science or Electronics Engineering at the Department of Computing and Electronic Systems, Essex University in Colchester, Essex? It is not only a great place to study, but also a foreleader in technology at an UK leading University with courses and doctoral research in Robotics, Natural Engineering, Intelligent Systems, Embedded Systems, Networking and Photonics, Laser Technology etc.
Updated in April 2008 by Kevan.
And Last updated on: Sunday, 20-May-2007 17:31:01 PDT