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A silver pattern crown coin is a British coin that was produced between 1707 and 1965. This coin is made of silver and has a profile picture of Queen Victoria on it.
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Such a coin does not exist. The Royal Mint produced no 1704 Crown coins.
The silver content of the 1981 British Royal Wedding commemorative general circulation crown is zero. It is a cupro-nickel coin. No British general circulation coin has had any silver content since 1946. The 1981 silver Proof FDC Crown coin which was sold in a case, has a 92.5% silver content.
Such a coin does not exist. The only two years Australia issued a Crown (Five Shilling) coin was 1937 and 1938.
The Royal Mint did not produce any Crown (Five Shilling) coins from 1903 to 1926 inclusive, Proof, pattern or otherwise. It is quite unusual that no 1911 Crown was produced since it was the Coronation year of George V. All British "silver" coins minted prior to 1920 contained 92.5% silver. There was a silver Proof FDC Halfcrown coin minted in 1911.
It would depend on the coin! They made many silver George V coins in 1929. It could be anywhere from a silver crown to a small penny.
All varieties of the 1935 British Crown have a 50% silver content.
A genuine silver coin produced by the Royal Mint will be in protective packaging indicating what the coin is made from. It should also include a certificate of authenticity.
There are 4 Isle of Man 1976 Commemorative Crown coins. Two are silver, two are copper-nickel. The silver coins coins are 0.9250 silver, as close as you are likely to get to pure silver.
It's impossible to say for certain, as the question omits the coin's denomination. A silver coin for that year could be a threepence, sixpence, shilling, florin, or half crown.
Such a coin does not exist. The "Churchill" Crown was a Five Shilling coin issued in 1965. The 1977 Crown was a 25 Pence coin commemorating the Silver Jubilee of Queen Elizabeth II.
Assuming you refer to the 1981 British 25 Pence coin (Crown), it is made from a copper-nickel alloy. If you have a sterling silver Proof coin, it will state somewhere on the packaging that the coin is made from sterling silver.
The Royal Mint did not produce any Crown coins for circulation from 1848 to 1886 inclusive. A British 1879 sterling silver Crown (Five Shillings)(Victoria - young head)(Proof FDC), is excessively rare and could fetch a very high price if it remains in mint condition. I suggest you wrap the coin up and take it to a reputable coin dealer who will be able to give a valuation based on inspection and positive identification of the coin.