Provincial Tokens
Anglesey DH 296

Obverse:

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Reverse:

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Coin Details

Origin/Country: WALES - ANGLESEY
Item Description: 1/2P 1788 WALES D&h-296 ANGLESEY E: PAYABLE IN ANGLESEY Anglesey DH 296
Full Grade: PCGS MS 66 Red Brown
Owner: farthing

Set Details

Custom Sets: Provincial Tokens
Competitive Sets: This coin is not competing in any sets.

Owner Comments:

Anglesey DH #296
Obverse: A cowled Druids head facing left within a thin wreath of oak leaves and acorns. 4 acorns at the tie, 26 acorns in the wreath, 13 to each side.
Reverse: The cypher PMCo with 1788 above THE ANGLESEY MINES HALFPENNY.
Edge: ON DEMAND IN LONDON LIVERPOOL OR ANGLESEY . X X .
Diesinker: Thomas Williams
Manufacturer: William Williams
Rarity: Common
The Parys Mine Company was formed in 1778 and was jointly owned by the Rev. Edward Hughes of Amlwch and Greenfield Hall Holywell in Flintshire. Thomas Williams a lawyer at Llanidan and MP for Marlow and eventually Anglesey and John Dawes a London stockbroker. It was Thomas Williams (1737-1802) who was the prime mover of the mining enterprise and this whole token issue. His mining, smelting and manufacturing empire stretched the breadth of North Wales and beyond into Lancashire and Cornwall. The Parys Mine Company had large smelting works in South Wales and manufactured copper at Holywell.
The Parys Mine was about two miles from the small port of Amlwch. In 1768 rich deposits were found a few feet beneath the surface of the Mountain. Through his wife, the Rev Hughes owned this mountainside and soon two thousand men were being employed to mine between twenty and forty thousand tons of copper per annum! With the copper on hand these tokens were initially made to ease the situation of little small change amongst the miners however, soon these Druid halfpennies were being made to provide copper change throughout the country.
Atkins, Anglesea 147
Bt. Stacks Bowers Summer Showcase Sale, September 2025

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