½ Penny (Hampshire - Portsmouth / Thomas Sharp) ND (1797) front ½ Penny (Hampshire - Portsmouth / Thomas Sharp) ND (1797) back
½ Penny (Hampshire - Portsmouth / Thomas Sharp) ND (1797) photo
© apuking (CC BY-SA)

½ Penny Hampshire - Portsmouth / Thomas Sharp ND

1797 year
Copper 10 g 29 mm
Description
Issuer
United Kingdom (United Kingdom, British Overseas Territories and Crown Dependencies)
Type
Token
Year
1797
Value
½ Penny (1⁄480)
Currency
Conder tokens (1787-1797)
Composition
Copper
Weight
10 g
Diameter
29 mm
Shape
Round
Technique
Milled
Demonetized
1797
Updated
2024-10-09
References
Numista
N#89731
Rarity index
85%

Reverse

Legend across seven horizontal lines

Lettering:
Sr. JOHN JERVIS
WITH 15 SAIL
PURSUED & DEFEATED
THE SPANISH FLEET OF
27 SAIL OF THE LINE
FEBRUARY 14th
1797

Engraver: Thomas Wyon the Elder

Edge

Plain with incuse legend

Lettering: PORTSMOUTH HALFPENNY PAYABLE AT THOS. SHARPS .X.

Comment

Portsmouth was and still is the headquarters of the British naval fleet. 1797 was an eventful year and two of the Royal Navy's greatest victories were achieved in this year: St. Vincent in February and Camperdown in October. Yet between these two dates the navy passed through a serious crisis of fleet mutinies at Spithead and The Nore. 1797 also saw the rise to fame of Horatio Nelson, whose dramatic action at the Battle of Cape St. Vincent secured victory. At the battle Admiral Sir John Jervis (later Earl St. Vincent) led a squadron of 15 sail against a numerically far superior Spanish fleet. He fell on them off the southern coast of Portugal as they were running for Cadiz and divided their line into two parts. From his flagship, HMS Victory he ordered his ships to tack in succession and prevent the gap from being closed. Nelson, last but two in the line, saw that this manoeuvre would not be completed in time and made a quick decision to turn his ship, HMS Captain into the gap. He took on seven Spanish ships, including the Santissima Trinidad, the largest ship in the world and two other ships, the San Nicolas and San Josef. Through a hail of pistol and musket fire he led boarding parties onto both and captured both. By nightfall four ships had been taken and ten others crippled. Admiral Jervis was generous in his praise of Nelson who was knighted (KB). Commodore Nelson was to fly his flag as Rear Admiral Sir Horatio Nelson - the promotion had been approved before the battle but Nelson did not hear of it until after St. Vincent.

Engraver - Wyon. Manufacturer - Kempson Proprietor - Thomas Sharp, a Mercer.

Other variants of this type exist with similar obverse and slight changes to the reverse:

DH#61, Atkins#39; DH#62, Atkins#40; DH#63, Atkins#41; DH#64.

Interesting fact

One interesting fact about the Token ½ Penny (Hampshire - Portsmouth / Thomas Sharp) ND (1797) coin is that it was issued during a time of severe coinage shortages in the United Kingdom, particularly in the 1790s. The coin was minted by Thomas Sharp, a merchant in Portsmouth, as a private token, which was a common practice during that time. The coin's design features a shield with the initials "T.S." (for Thomas Sharp) and a sailing ship, reflecting Portsmouth's importance as a naval port. Despite being minted by a private individual, the coin was accepted as legal tender in the local area and remains a valuable collector's item today.