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Need help from an old person please. :-p

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ProfilePosted byOptionsPost Date

Paul

Paul Report 25 Oct 2006 09:22

Just found out one of my ancestors was paid a 'bounty' of £2.10d What does the 'd' stand for??

AnninGlos

AnninGlos Report 25 Oct 2006 09:24

Old pence

Kay????

Kay???? Report 25 Oct 2006 09:26

£--S--D,(pence) As in old pennies, kay,

Suein10b

Suein10b Report 25 Oct 2006 09:27

Not sure Im an old person but the d in £2.10d in old fashioned money is pennies there were 12 pennies in a shilling Sue

Paul

Paul Report 25 Oct 2006 09:40

So it was £2.10p??

Bobtanian

Bobtanian Report 25 Oct 2006 09:47

no, Paul £2: 10 pence 12 pence = 1 shilling, 20 shillings per £1 1 New p = 2.4 old pence(d) toays term would be £2: 4p aprox.. bearing in mind todays value of a £1 that was probably a lot of money then Bob

Angela now in Wilts (not North Devon)

Angela now in Wilts (not North Devon) Report 25 Oct 2006 09:48

No, £2.04p. Angela

Paul

Paul Report 25 Oct 2006 10:03

How ruddy confusing... :-p He earnt this in 1794, so I don't know what that would be nowadays.

Willow

Willow Report 25 Oct 2006 10:32

I use this for converting http://www.nationalarchives.gov.uk/currency/results2.asp#mid In 1790, £2 0s 10d would have the same spending worth of today's £114.39

Keith

Keith Report 25 Oct 2006 10:38

Paul Try this site, it only goes back to 1830 but will give you an idea www(.)measuringworth(.)com/calculators/ukcompare/ Remove ( ) Keith

Janet in Yorkshire

Janet in Yorkshire Report 25 Oct 2006 11:06

Paul, there are NO old persons on here!!!!!! We are all young at heart LOL Jay

Roger

Roger Report 25 Oct 2006 11:11

Before decimal coinage it was pounds shillings and pence so it should have read £2.0s.10d

fraserbooks

fraserbooks Report 25 Oct 2006 11:34

A little erudition D was short for denarius, an old roman coin. The pound sign is actually a fancy L from Librus the old word for pound. Anne

Pat Kendrick

Pat Kendrick Report 25 Oct 2006 11:39

Paul Those were the days you could legally have LSD in your pocket LOL Pat

Roxanne

Roxanne Report 25 Oct 2006 11:44

Im not that Blinking old am I:-)) But I do remember the old currency,so maybe I am!lol

Alan

Alan Report 25 Oct 2006 11:55

When i left school in 1959 my first weeks wages for a 44 hour week was £2. 14s. 6d. ( £2 .73P) new money. Alan

~Messy

~Messy Report 25 Oct 2006 12:34

I've tried both those 'conversion' sites but they don't seem to work for larger amounts. An ancestor of mine left £180,000 in 1915 and I'd love to know what that would be worth today !

Janice

Janice Report 25 Oct 2006 12:52

Jayvee, Do £180 then and multiply your answer by 1000!

~Messy

~Messy Report 25 Oct 2006 13:14

Thanks, Janice, why didn't I think of that ??!! Pity the £7m didn't find it's way down the illegitimate line !!

POSITIVE Pauline

POSITIVE Pauline Report 25 Oct 2006 13:18

Anybody remember the 10 shilling note - used to be brown. I used to get really excited on birthdays and Christmas as I always had one of those from my Grandma. Also remember half a crown - 2 of those paid for school dinners for the week! PP xx