dejavuatbtn
Well-known member
Ah, a farthing blackjack is worth round about a thousandth of a quid.
Just think of the carnage if we ever changed road signs to the metric system.
69-70 season ticket
Grandstand £10 10s
South Stand £5 5s
I think potg was 3 shillings
Juniors & Pensioners 2/6
A programme would have set you back 1/-
The last home game in old money was Shrewsbury
The first home game in new money was Preston (programme 5p)
Another stich up forced on us .
I can remember some weird stuff from up to 60 years' ago. I can recite the register of pupils from my first year at secondary school, and when I came across a photo of my junior class when I was 10, I could name every one.
Back to the prices, I was paid 15p and hour (3 shillings). My first pay packet contained £ 1.20. I thought I'd won the pools!
Aha, so I am etched somewhere in your mind. That could explain a lot.
144 pennies in a pound? You got short changed big time.
Acton, Anderson, Braid, Bransbury, Buchelor, Clarke, Cook, Ewens, French, Gravitt, Green, Hart, Heath, Homewood, Lawrence, Melville-Brown, Mitchell, Morgan, Munday, Oliver-Minos, Pitt, Rolf, Spicer, Tahzibb, Townsend, Turner, Turner, Wadey, Williams, Wragg!
Wow, as I started to read that list I was aged 12 again and can see everyone.
960 farthings to the pound was much more fun! Trouble was you could pay a £1 bill with them - they were only legal tender up to 1 shilling (five pence). Even for something costing a shilling, you could still right royally p1ss off a shopkeeper if you paid them with 48 farthings!
Farthings was just before my time. I saw a few but they were no longer legal tender. late 50's, early 60's?
Probably shouldn't have pressed play on that Bygraves tune, nasty ear worm potential