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Michael Gray Michael Gray is offline
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Default Numismatic Question for you Limeys

Pyotr, as I'm from Ashington, north of Newcastle-upon-Tyne, in
Northumberland, England, I'm not assuming anything - I'm stating.
I remember as a lad seeing the coalman come around with his horse-drawn
cart and humping hundredweight sacks of coal to the coalshed in our
backyard; and later, when it was tipped out of a lorry, shovelling it in,
a ton at a time, for a shilling. My main source of revenue!
Mike - bringing coals to Newcastle.

On Sat, 19 Sep 2009 12:48:53 -0700, pyotr filipivich wrote:
Wow! late Saturday afternoon and NO answers yet. What do you guys do
when such a weighty question stares you in the face?

A little help: 4 quarters = 1 cwt (hundredweight = 112 lbs)
20 cwt = 1 ton (112 x 20 = 2240 lbs = 1 ton)


Ah, but you are assuming this "cost of 5 tons 13 cwt" refers to
the long ton.

and then:
4 farthings = 1 penny
12 pence = 1 shilling (and for interest, 2 shillings = 1
florin, 2 shillings and sixpence = a half-crown,

5 shillings = 1
crown)
20 shillings = 1 pound ( and let us not forget the
illustrious 1 guinea = 1 pound and 1 shilling)

it surprises me not at all that you guys below the 49th. said "the hell
with it" and split. The tea tax was just an excuse I think. regards,
Mike in BC

I used to love those old arithmetic questions like:

If a quarter cwt of coal costs one pound 3 shillings and 4 pence
three
farthings, what would be the cost of 5 tons 13 cwt and 3 quarters?
regards, Mike in BC

-
pyotr filipivich
We will drink no whiskey before its nine. It's eight fifty eight. Close
enough!