Decimal Day
(British Shoppers learning the new Currency System - 1971)
Decimal Day in
the United Kingdom and in Ireland was the day on which each country decimalised
its respective £sd currency of pounds, shillings, and pence. Taking place on 15
February 1971, before this date in the United Kingdom, the British pound was
made up of 20 shillings, each of which was made up of 12 pence, a total of 240
pence. With decimalisation, the pound kept its old value and name, and the only
changes were in relation to the subunits. The shilling was abolished, and the
pound was subdivided into 100 "new pence" (abbreviated "p"),
each of which was worth 2.4 "old pence" (abbreviated "d").
In Ireland, the Irish pound had a similar £sd currency structure and similar
decimalisation changes took place.
Background The
Russian ruble was the first decimal currency to be used in Europe, dating to
1704, though China had been using a decimal system for at least 2000 years. Elsewhere,
the Coinage Act of 1792 introduced decimal currency to the United States, the
first English speaking country to adopt a decimalised currency. In France, the
decimal French franc was introduced in 1795. Before the 1970s, earlier
efforts in the United Kingdom to introduce decimalised currency had failed; in
1824, the United Kingdom Parliament rejected Sir John Wrottesley's proposals to
decimalise sterling, which were prompted by the introduction of the French
franc three decades earlier. Following this, little progress towards
decimalisation was made in the United Kingdom for over a century, with the
exception of the two shilling silver florin, first issued on 1849, worth 1/10
of a pound. A double florin or four
shilling piece, introduced in 1887, was a further step towards decimalisation,
but failed to gain acceptance and was struck only between 1887 and 1890.
In 1960, a
report prepared jointly by the British Association for the Advancement of
Science and the Association of British Chambers of Commerce, followed by the
success of decimalisation in South Africa, prompted the Government to set up
the Committee of the Inquiry on Decimal Currency (Halsbury Committee) in 1961,
which reported in 1963. The adoption of the changes suggested in the report was
announced on 1 March 1966. The Decimal
Currency Board (DCB) was created to manage the transition, but the plans were
not approved by Parliament until the Decimal Currency Act of May 1969. The
former Greater London Council leader Bill Fiske was named as the Chairman of
the Decimal Currency Board. Consideration was given to introducing a new major
unit of currency worth ten shillings in the old currency. Suggested names
included the new pound, the royal and the noble. It would have resulted in the
"decimal penny" being worth only slightly more than the old penny, an
approach adopted in South Africa, Australia and New Zealand in the 1960s,
adopting respectively the South African rand, Australian dollar and New Zealand
dollar equal in value to 10 shillings. However, Halsbury decided that the pound
sterling's importance as a reserve currency meant that the pound should remain
unchanged.
(A Decimal Day Starter Kit)
Preparation Under
the new system, the pound was retained, but was divided into 100 new pence,
denoted by the symbol p. New coinage was issued alongside the old coins. The 5p
and 10p coins were introduced in April 1968 and were the same size, composition
and value as the shilling and two shilling coins in circulation with them. In
October 1969, the 50p coin was introduced, with the 10s note withdrawn on 20
November 1970. This reduced the number of new coins required to be introduced
on Decimal Day, meaning that the British public would already be familiar with
three of the six new coins. Small booklets were made available, containing some
or all of the new denominations. The old halfpenny was withdrawn from
circulation on 31 July 1969, and the half-crown (2s 6d) followed on 31 December
to ease the transition. The farthing,
last minted in 1956, had already ceased to be legal tender in 1961.
A substantial
publicity campaign took place in the weeks before Decimal Day, including a song
by Max Bygraves called "Decimalisation". The BBC broadcast a series
of five minute programmes, titled "Decimal Five", to which The
Scaffold contributed some specially written tunes. ITV repeatedly broadcast a short drama called
Granny Gets The Point starring Doris Hare, in which an elderly woman who does
not understand the new system is taught to use it by her grandson. At 10 am on 15 February itself and again the
following week, BBC 1 broadcast 'New Money Day', a Merry-Go Round schools'
programme in which puppet maker Peter Firmin and his small friend Muskit
encountered different prices and new coins when they visited the shops. Banks
received stocks of the new coins in advance, which were issued to retailers
shortly before Decimal Day to enable them to give change immediately after the
changeover. Banks were closed from 3:30 pm on Wednesday 10 February 1971 to
10:00 am on Monday 15 February to enable all outstanding cheques and credits in
the clearing system to be processed and customers' account balances to be
converted from £sd to decimal. In many banks, the conversion was done manually,
as few bank branches were then computerised. February had been chosen for
Decimal Day because it was the quietest time of the year for the banks, shops
and transport organisations.
Many items were
priced in both currencies for some time before and after the change. Prior to
Decimal Day, items priced in both currencies had displayed the price in
predecimalised currency first, with the price in decimal currency last in
parentheses. From Decimal Day onwards, this order was reversed, with decimal
currency presented first, and predecimal currency last in parentheses; for
example, 1s (5p) would become 5p (1s). This latter order was used on most
football programmes during the 1970–71 season. High denomination (10p, 20p and
50p) stamps were issued on 17 June 1970.Post offices were issued with
simplified training stamps in the same colours as the upcoming decimal stamps. Exceptions
to the 15 February introduction of decimalisation were British Rail and London
Transport, which had gone decimal one day early, the former urging customers,
if they chose to use pennies or threepenny pieces, to pay them in multiples of
6d (2+1/2p, the lowest common multiple of the two systems). Bus companies, many
of which were state owned by the National Bus Company, were another exception,
and went decimal on 21 February.
After
Decimal Day Due to extensive preparations and the publicity campaigns
organised by the British government, Decimal Day itself went smoothly. Some
criticism - such as the fact that the new halfpenny coin was relatively small,
and that some traders had taken advantage of the transition to raise their
prices - were levelled, despite the fact that in the latter case, overall price
adjustments slightly favoured the consumer. Some used new pennies as sixpences
in vending machines. After 15 February, shops continued to accept payment in
old coins but always issued change in new coins. The old coins were then
returned to banks, and so most of them were quickly taken out of circulation.
The new halfpenny, penny, and twopence coins were introduced on 15 February
1971. Within two weeks of Decimal Day, the old penny (1d) and old threepenny
(3d) coins had left circulation, and old sixpences had become somewhat rare. On 31 August 1971, the 1d and 3d were
officially withdrawn from circulation, ending the transition period to decimal
currency.
The government
intended that in speech, the new units would be called "new pence";
however, the British public quickly began to refer to pennies as
"pee" when shortened, with "10p" pronounced as "ten
pee" instead of "ten new pence". Other shortenings previously
common, such as "tuppence", were now rarely heard, with terms such as
"tanner" (used for the silver sixpence), which previously designated
amounts of money, were no longer used. However, some slang terms, such as
"quid" and "bob", previously used for pounds and shillings
respectively, survived from predecimal times. Amounts denominated in guineas
(21s or £1.05) were reserved still for specialist transactions, and continued
to be used in the sale of horses and at some auctions, amongst others. The
public information campaign over the preceding two years helped, as well as the
trick of getting a rough conversion of new pence into old shillings and pence
by simply doubling the number of new pence and placing a solidus, or slash,
between the digits: 17p multiplied by 2 = 34, – approximately equal to 3/4
("three and four", or three shillings and four pence), with a similar
process for the reverse conversion.[citation needed] The willingness of Britain's
younger population to embrace decimalisation also helped, with elderly people
having greater difficulty in adapting; the phrase "How much is that in old
money?", or even "How much is that in real money?" became
associated with those who struggled with the change, before in the following
decades coming to refer to conversions between metric and imperial weights and
measures In shops from Decimal Day onwards, new stock would be universally
priced in 'new money', though in smaller shops such as newsagents, it was still
possible to find stock priced in £sd for several years after 1971; however,
remaining stock priced in £sd would still be charged in its equivalent in
decimal currency. Around Decimal Day, "Decimal Adders" and other
converters were available to help people convert between the old and new coins.
The following is a table showing conversions between the decimal and
pre-decimal systems.
All predecimal
coins, except for certain non circulating coins such as crowns, sovereigns, and
double florins, which were explicitly excluded from demonetisation, are now no
longer legal tender. Public outcry at the proposed demise of the old sixpence
(6d), worth exactly 2+1/2p and originally slated for early withdrawal,
postponed its withdrawal until June 1980. Shillings and florins, together with
their same sized 5p and 10p coin equivalents, coexisted in circulation as valid
currency until the early 1990s. In theory, this would have included coins
dating back to 1816, but in practice, the oldest were dated 1947, as older
coins contained silver, meaning the value of their metal was worth more than
their nominal value. The coins were withdrawn when smaller 5p and 10p coins
were introduced in 1990 and 1992 respectively. The face value of Maundy money
coins was maintained, increasing all their face values by a factor of 2.4, as
the coins continued to be legal tender as new pence. The numismatic value of
each coin, though, greatly exceeds face value. All predecimal crowns remain
legal tender, with a face value of 25p.
Republic of
Ireland When the old £sd system (consisting of pounds, shillings, and
pence) was in operation, the United Kingdom and Ireland operated within the
Sterling area, effectively a single monetary area. The Irish pound was created
as a separate currency in 1927 with distinct coins and notes, but the terms of
the Irish Currency Act obliged the Irish currency commissioners to redeem Irish
pounds on a fixed 1:1 basis, and so day-to-day banking operations continued
exactly as they had been before the creation of the Irish pound. The Irish pound was decimalised on 15 February
1971, the same date as the British pound. This arrangement continued
until 1979 when Irish obligations to the European Monetary System led to
Ireland breaking the historic link with Sterling. In Ireland, all
pre-decimal coins, except the 1s, 2s and 10s coins, were called in during the
initial process between 1969 and 1972; the ten shilling coin, which, as
recently issued and in any event equivalent to 50p, was permitted to remain outstanding
(though due to silver content, the coin did not circulate). The 1s and 2s were
recalled in 1993 and 1994 respectively. Pre-decimal Irish coins may still be
redeemed at their face value equivalent in euros at the Central Bank in Dublin.
Pre-decimal Irish coins and stamps' values were denoted with Irish language
abbreviations (scilling ("shilling", abbreviated "s") and
pingin ("penny", abbreviated "p")) rather than
abbreviations derived from the Latin solidi and denarii used in other Sterling
countries. Irish people and business otherwise used "£sd" just as in
other countries. Thus, prior to decimalisation, coins were marked '1p', '3p'
etc. rather '1d' and '3d' as in Britain. Low-value Irish postage stamps
likewise used 'p' rather than 'd'; so a two-penny stamp was marked '2p' in
Ireland rather than '2d' as in the UK. After decimalisation, while British
stamps switched from 'd' to 'p', Irish stamps (but not coins) printed the
number with no accompanying letter; so a stamp worth 2 new pence was marked '2p'
in the UK and simply '2' in Ireland.
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