This piece belongs to the vast wave of privately issued copper tokens that flooded British commerce in the 1790s, filling a vacuum created by the near-total absence of regal copper coinage. The Royal Mint had effectively abandoned small denomination production for decades, leaving merchants, tavern keepers, and tradesmen to commission their own token issues — legally and openly. Dalton & Hamer catalogued hundreds of Middlesex pieces from this period, and Masonic-themed tokens appeared across multiple issuers, suggesting the fraternal market was commercially reliable enough to justify the dies.
This piece belongs to the vast wave of privately issued copper tokens that flooded British commerce in the 1790s, filling a vacuum created by the near-total absence of regal copper coinage. The Royal Mint had effectively abandoned small denomination production for decades, leaving merchants, tavern keepers, and tradesmen to commission their own token issues — legally and openly. Dalton & Hamer catalogued hundreds of Middlesex pieces from this period, and Masonic-themed tokens appeared across multiple issuers, suggesting the fraternal market was commercially reliable enough to justify the dies.