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2007-07-15 18:48:41 · 4 answers · asked by Shamillionaire 2 in Games & Recreation Hobbies & Crafts

4 answers

First you need to determine the grade of your coin. Here's the British Commonwealth grading standard :
http://www.anda.com.au/images/grading.jpg
1912 is not a rare date for the half penny, and is priced at A$0.50 in grade Very Good and below, A$5 in fine and A$15 in grade Very Fine range. In grade EF the coin sells for A$35-$40 and EF with 8 pearls on crown at A$65. If your coin grades higher than EF, please click below:
http://img73.imageshack.us/img73/1082/aussb5.jpg
The coin has less value outside Australia. The 1912-H was struck at Heaton's/Birmingham Mint and has a mintage of 2,400,000.

2007-07-16 03:13:30 · answer #1 · answered by silverpet 6 · 0 1

You have KM# 22 and yes it might be worth more in Australia but there is a large collector base here in the U.S. as well as Canada for British Commonwealth coins. Depending on grade it is worth $1 and up. Most catalogs are a little low on the British Commonwealth coins. Nice grade fines and above are not as easy to locate as the catalog prices would lead us to believe, in the above mentioned series. I think World War I took a greater toll on coins than must people think. It maybe not worth a fortune but is an interesting coin. Hold on to it for the only place the value can go is up.

2007-07-16 07:28:22 · answer #2 · answered by Taiping 7 · 0 0

Half a cent. They are worth nothing.

2016-04-01 06:21:38 · answer #3 · answered by Anonymous · 1 0

6 cents..

2007-07-15 18:57:40 · answer #4 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

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