Subscriptions from Ashton–under–Lyne Relief Society, 8 July 1844
Subscriptions from Ashton–under–Lyne Relief Society, 8 July 1844
Source Note
Source Note
| £ S d | |
| Catharine Lowe | £0–0–7 |
| Mary Moss | £0–0–6 |
| £0–0–6 | |
| £0–0–6 | |
| Martha Lord | £0–1–0 |
| Mary Lord | £0–1–0 |
| Mary Davies | £0–0–4 |
| Sarah Harrop | £0–0–3 |
| Betty Heap | £0–2–6 |
| Mary Moss | £0–0–7 |
| Margaret Moss | £0–0–7 |
| Nancy Aliston | £0–0–3 |
| Emelina Lees | £0–6–0 <£0–1–2> |
| Mary Broadbent | £0–0–8 |
| Alice Hoyle | £0–0–8 |
| <Sarah Hoyle | £0–0–8> |
| Ann Ebenson | £0–0–3 |
| Martha Whitworth | £0–0–5 |
| Lidya Whitworth | £0–0–5 |
| Charlotte Whitworth | £0–0–5 |
| Fanny Whitworth | £0–0–5 |
| Sarah Ogden | £0–0–3 |
| £ S d | |
| Betsy Heaton | £0–0–2½ |
| Sarah Ann Heaton | £0–0–2½ |
| Sarah Heaton | £0–0–2½ |
| Hannah France | £0–0–0½ |
| Elizabeth Jones | £0–0–6 |
| £0–0–6 | |
| Ann Greenhalgh | £0–0–4 |
| Alice Cooper | £0–0–6½ |
| Eliza Andrews | £0–2–0 |
| Eliza Bradshaw | £0–0–5 |
| Sarah Adwin | £0–0–5 |
| Sarah Adwin | £0–0–5 |
| £0–2–0 | |
| Rebecca France | £0–0–2½ |
| Mary Ann France | £<0–0–1> |
| £1–2–0 |
| Witness our hands | President <Betty Heap> |
| Clerk Eliza Andrews | |
| Treasurer’s <Elizabeth Jones> | |
| <Emelina Lees> |
Source Note
Source Note
Document Transcript
Document Information
Document Information
Footnotes
Footnotes
British currency in the nineteenth century consisted of coins of varying values. The primary currency used was the pound sterling, often in the form of a gold sovereign. Smaller coins called shillings and pence were also commonly used. A pound was traditionally divided into twenty shillings, and each shilling was divided into twelve pennies, or pence. The two smallest coins were divisions of a penny, into four farthings or two halfpennies. The abbreviation used in ledgers and other financial records for this form of currency was “£ s d.” The pound symbol (£) derived from the word “Libra,” meaning “a pound” in Latin. The “s” was an abbreviation for the Latin “solidus,” which in English was referred to as a “shilling.” The “d” was an abbreviation of “denarius,” or a Roman silver coin, which was also initially used as the name of the English silver penny. While other countries in the British empire abandoned this system, currency in the United Kingdom of Great Britain was not decimalized and standardized into units of one hundred until 1971. (“Pound,” in Oxford English Dictionary, 7:1202; “Solidus,” in Oxford English Dictionary, 10:401; “Denarius,” in Oxford English Dictionary, 3:191; Sutherland, English Coinage 600–1900; see also “Pounds, Shillings and Pence,” The Royal Mint Museum, accessed 3 July 2023, https://www.royalmintmuseum.org.uk/journal/history/pounds-shillings-and-pence.)
The Oxford English Dictionary. Edited by James A. H. Murray, Henry Bradley, W. A. Craigie, and C. T. Onions. 12 vols. 1933. Reprint, Oxford: Oxford University Press, 1970.
Sutherland, Carol Humphrey Vivian. English Coinage 600–1900. London: B. T. Batsford, 1973.
The Royal Mint Museum. https://www.royalmintmuseum.org.uk/journal/history/pounds-shillings-and-pence/.
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