Rare 1794 penny token: M. Lambe & Son Tea Dealers & Grocers

Discussion in 'World Coins' started by The Meat man, May 16, 2026 at 7:55 PM.

  1. The Meat man

    The Meat man Supporter! Supporter

    I have an interesting one today – a penny token minted in 1794 for M. Lambe & Son, Tea Dealers and Grocers of Bath in Somerset.

    Somerset & Bath 1794 penny token.jpg
    GREAT BRITAIN
    Time of George III, 1760-1820
    CU Penny Token (29.5mm, 21.30g, 6h)
    Dated 1794
    Obverse: TEAS COFFEE SPICES & SUGARS. around camel, bridled, walking left under radiating sky, carrying load on its back; star in exergue
    Reverse: M. LAMBE & SON TEA-DEALERS & GROCERS BATH * around view of the Old East India House within dotted border; INDIA HOUSE above, date below
    On edge: WE PROMISE TO PAY ONE PENNY ON DEMAND.
    References: Numista 504216 (this coin pictured)
    Mintage: unknown
    In NGC encapsulation, graded MS 63 BN. From the Rumney Animal Collection.
    Rich dark chocolate patina. Much rarer than the halfpenny type. Struck with the same dies on a doubly thick flan.


    This token was minted at the very end of the 18th century, a time when the British empire was just beginning to come into its own. It’s true, the American colonies had recently been lost, and there were serious troubles in Europe; but elsewhere across the world, notably in India, British trade, power, and influence were ever increasing.

    From these distant foreign lands came a flood of new and exotic luxury goods: tea, tobacco, coffee, sugar, spices, textiles, and other commodities. As the scale of the trade grew, so did the ability of the everyday Englander to partake of its riches. Goods once considered luxuries only for the ultra-wealthy became increasingly available to the general public.

    It was in this context of foreign trade and far-flung empire that this token was struck, and its design was most certainly intended to evoke and accentuate the spirit of the age. On the obverse there is the image of a camel, an animal itself redolent of the mysterious Orient, laden with strange and exotic goods, plodding under a foreign sun. The reverse depicts the place where it all happened: the East India House in London, which was the headquarters of the British East India Company, the huge chartered company that at the time still essentially ran India and all trade in the Far East.

    East India House, London, circa 1766
    E_India_House.jpg
    By T. Simpson (1766) - William Foster, The East India House (London, 1924), opp. p. 132, Public Domain, https://commons.wikimedia.org/w/index.php?curid=26266317


    Mark Lambe (died c. 1791) was a tea-dealer and grocer who ran his business out of a shop on Stall Street in Bath, Somerset. When he died, his wife Mary took over the family business. On July 21, 1791, she took her son into partnership, and the business became known as M. Lambe & Son, selling, in addition to the commodities noted on the above token, quality candles and candle molds. Together, Mary Lambe and her son continued to operate the business into the 1800s.


    "An advertisement from the 21 July 1791 edition of the Bath Chronicle announcing that Mary Lambe had taken her son into partnership:"
    lamb-ad-1768.jpg
    Source: http://www.yeovilhistory.info/lambe-markes.htm


    Nos. 35 and 36 Stall Street, which were leased by Mary Lambe in 1797 for M. Lambe & Son Tea-Dealers and Grocers:
    1280px-35_and_36,_Stall_Street,_Bath.jpg
    By Plumbum64 - Own work, CC BY-SA 3.0, https://commons.wikimedia.org/w/index.php?curid=28052472
    I hope you enjoy the post! Please feel free to post your own coins & comments. :)
     
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  3. Joshua Lemons

    Joshua Lemons Well-Known Member Supporter

    Nice looking token!
     
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  4. The Meat man

    The Meat man Supporter! Supporter

    Thanks! It was too nice to pass up, especially in attractive mint-state condition. Although there are actually a surprising number of MS graded examples.
     
  5. Chris B

    Chris B Supporter! Supporter

    Nice score. I thought it looked familiar. I have one but is raw and XF at best.

    GBSomerset179401.jpg
     
  6. Collecting Nut

    Collecting Nut Borderline Hoarder

    Nice token! Wish I had one. I love your write up as well as the token. :)
     
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  7. The Meat man

    The Meat man Supporter! Supporter

    Nice! Is that the penny or halfpenny type?
    Mrs. Lambe and son produced a prodigious quantity of token coinage. I believe there is one type that features a tea-chest complete with Chinese characters on it. Pretty cool.
     
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  8. The Meat man

    The Meat man Supporter! Supporter

    Thanks for the kind words. :) Actually these tokens (especially the halfpenny type) are quite common and usually can be had for a good deal under $100.
     
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  9. Chris B

    Chris B Supporter! Supporter

    I have it cataloged as a half penny but now I am wondering if that is correct. Will have to pull it out tomorrow.
     
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  10. Chris B

    Chris B Supporter! Supporter

    Well, I can't find it but, going from memory, I'm pretty sure mine is the half penny.
     
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  11. The Meat man

    The Meat man Supporter! Supporter

    It's interesting, that although the halfpenny types are more common, it almost seems like the dies were intended for penny-sized flans. I see a number of halfpennies with flans that are just a bit tight for the die.
     
  12. scottishmoney

    scottishmoney Buh bye

    The 17th through early 19th century saw a dearth of regal coinage - as though the establishment was more engrossed in social gathering etc than supplying the population with coinage to promote the growth of industry - the Industrial Revolution was underway in Britain and manufacturing saw particular advancements in production fueling the economy. The government took a lax attitude to creating coinage which is why private establishments created their own token coinage in bronze, occasionally silver and in a few select cases - gold.

    Inasmuch as this was a cause of discontent in Britain, her recently independent former colonies felt the same discontent with money issuance - colonial money in America was a contributing cause to what would become the American Revolution - the government in Britain never really addressed the money issue in the colonies which beginning with the Massachusetts-Bay coinage in 1652 would culminate in the colonial paper money issues in the 18th century which the crown condemned wholeheartedly. birminghamthreepence1813.jpg

    One of my personal fave issues of the early 19th century is the Birmingham Workhouse threepence weighing in at a hefty 2.5 ounces - struck by the industrial revolutionary marvel of Matthew Boulton's steam powered coin presses. As big as this monster is - the largest sized piece that circulated in Britain - there were plans for a bronze sixpence weighing 5 ounces that was the approximate dimensions of a hockey puck. Of the latter about a couple of dozen were struck but plans for issuance were tabled.
     
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  13. The Meat man

    The Meat man Supporter! Supporter

    Thanks for this added information. I hadn't really thought of the monetary problem also being a contributing factor in the American Revolution.

    That is a monstrous token! The closest I can come to it is one of Boulton's massive "cartwheel" twopenny coins, and even that still falls far short!

    George III 1797 Cartwheel twopence.jpg
    GREAT BRITAIN
    Time of George III, 1760-1820
    CU “Cartwheel” Two Pence (40.9mm, 56.64g, 6h)
    Dated 1797. Soho mint, Handsworth, England
    Obverse: GEORGIUS III · D:G · REX. incuse on raised rim; laureate and draped bust of King George III right
    Reverse: BRITANNIA. 1797 incuse on raised rim; seated figure of Britannia facing left, trident in left hand, olive branch in raised right hand, shield bearing Union flag resting on left, sea behind with ship on left, mint name below shield
    References: Numista 1287
    Mintage: 722,000
    Dark brown patina with hints of iridescence. A significant shortage of copper coinage in late 18th century Britain led to the proliferation of privately manufactured token pennies as well as outright counterfeit coins. In order to alleviate this shortage, the British government authorized Matthew Boulton, a Birmingham inventor and engineer, to strike copper pennies and twopence coins at his state-of-the-art mint in Soho. Boulton introduced a number of innovations intended to discourage counterfeiting. The coin itself was made to contain its face value in copper – a full two ounces for the twopence pieces. The coins were struck using a retaining collar to maintain perfectly round edges. And finally, the distinctive thick raised rims were designed to minimize wear on the coins’ surfaces during circulation. All in all, some 722,000 twopence pieces were minted by Boulton; but the sheer size and weight of the coins made them too unwieldy for general use, and after a few years production was ceased.

    I do edge you out, though, with this massive Ptolemaic "Hockey Puck" drachm. ;)

    Ptolemy II drachm.jpg
    PTOLEMY II, 284-246 BC
    AE Drachm (43.29mm, 72.67g, 1h)
    Struck 266-261 BC. Egypt, Alexandria mint
    Obverse: Horned head of Zeus Ammon right, wearing taenia with basileion
    Reverse: ΠΤΟΛΕΜΑΙΟΥ on l. ΒΑΣΙΛΕΩΣ on r.; two eagles with closed wings standing left on two thunderbolts; monograms between legs
    References: CPE B241
    Warm brown surfaces. A massive piece, over two and a half ounces of bronze.
     

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