Thomas Spence, Copper Farthing (D&H Middlesex 1112)

Thomas Spence, Copper Farthing (D&H Middlesex 1112)

Thomas Spence, Copper Farthing, (D&H Middlesex 1112) Obv: An inscription THOS. SPENCE SIR THOS. MORE THOS. PAINE 1795 on four lines. Around the perimeter ADVOCATES FOR THE RIGHTS OF MAN; Rev: A man riding upon a bull with the head of an ass. Around the perimeter AM I NOT THINE ASS; Edge: Plain  (Conder p.246, 18; Atkins p. 145, 789; D&H Middlesex 1112)

Choice faded red and brown uncirculated. 

Thomas Spence, (1750-1814), Newcastle schoolmaster and writer who moved to London in 1792, where he set up shop as a bookseller and became an active member of the London Corresponding Society. He allowed his home and shop to be used for meetings and, in May 1794, was arrested along with a dozen others, and remitted to Newgate Prison for his efforts. Upon release he entered the business of selling tokens,  publishing a handbill listing twenty obverse and twenty reverse dies that could be ordered paired in any combination, and authoring an early guide to the series, The Coin Collector's Companion in 1795. He issued and sold a variety of  tokens before quitting the business in late 1796; his stock and dies passing to Skidmore where they continued to be muled amongst themselves and with others then in Skidmore's posession.

 

 

£226.80