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Lucky treasure hunter unearths rare £23,000 hoard of silver coins

Daily Mail Online 1 day ago

A lucky treasure hunter has discovered a £23,000 hoard of silver coins with a metal detector he won in a raffle.

Novice Mickey Richardson had only been using the metal detector for three months when he made the discovery of a lifetime in a muddy field in Ansty, near Dorchester in Dorset. 

After he uncovered the treasures, Mr Richardson spent a weekend digging up the 234 coins.

He said: 'I only took up the hobby a few months before and I had a very basic metal detector which I just used to take down to Bournemouth beach.

'But then I entered a raffle on a Facebook group for a metal detecting club and won the first prize which was a top of the range detector.

Mickey Richardson with the collection of 234 coins he discovered in a muddy field in Ansty, near Dorchester in Dorset
Mickey Richardson with the collection of 234 coins he discovered in a muddy field in Ansty, near Dorchester in Dorset
Mr Richardson discovered the hoard of coins, worth £23,000, with a metal detector he won in a raffle. He said: 'I entered a raffle on a Facebook group for a metal detecting club and won the first prize which was a top of the range detector'
Mr Richardson discovered the hoard of coins, worth £23,000, with a metal detector he won in a raffle. He said: 'I entered a raffle on a Facebook group for a metal detecting club and won the first prize which was a top of the range detector'
Mr Richardson said: 'On the weekend I found the hoard I was just about to call it a day when I got a strong signal and found a Charles I shilling. Then I swept the area again and got another signal and then another signal and another'
Mr Richardson said: 'On the weekend I found the hoard I was just about to call it a day when I got a strong signal and found a Charles I shilling. Then I swept the area again and got another signal and then another signal and another'
The coins are believed to have been buried for safekeeping by a farmer in 1644 as the English Civil War raged around him. The owner never returned to retrieve his savings and is likely to have been killed in the conflict
The coins are believed to have been buried for safekeeping by a farmer in 1644 as the English Civil War raged around him. The owner never returned to retrieve his savings and is likely to have been killed in the conflict

'On the weekend I found the hoard I was just about to call it a day when I got a strong signal and found a Charles I shilling. Then I swept the area again and got another signal and then another signal and another.

'I just couldn't believe it. I dug up 74 silver coins on the first day and was shattered afterwards. I went back the next morning thinking it would be nice to round it up to 100 but found a total of 234 coins spread over a radius.'

The 63-year-old handed the coins over to his local Finds Liaison Officer as required by law under the Treasure Act.

The British Museum spent some time examining them before they were disclaimed and returned to Mr Richardson as 'finders keepers'.

He watched live as the coins were sold at London auctioneers Spink & Son for £18,500. With fees added on the total price paid for them as £23,000.

Gregory Edmund, from Spink, said: 'The vendor live-streamed the sale and he was jumping up and down at some of the prices achieved. He was very happy.' 

The grandfather from Bournemouth, Dorset, must split the proceeds 50/50 with the landowner but he is planning a summer holiday for him and his wife, Rosalynd, with his share.

He said: 'It was a day I will never forget. I alerted the Finds Liaison Officer and the rest is history.'

Mr Richardson said he was expecting the hoard to sell for £10,000 at auction so was delighted with the final result.  

Mr Richardson holding one of the coins. He says finding the coins is a day he will never forget
Mr Richardson holding one of the coins. He says finding the coins is a day he will never forget 
A sixpence from 1562 with Elizabeth I profile on the head. Thus is one of the earliest coins found in the hoard. Some of the Elizabeth and James' coins had been defaced by being scratched, probably by a former Catholic owner in protest at their protestant views
A sixpence from 1562 with Elizabeth I profile on the head. Thus is one of the earliest coins found in the hoard. Some of the Elizabeth and James' coins had been defaced by being scratched, probably by a former Catholic owner in protest at their protestant views
A halfcrown from Charles I reign, with a datemark from 1643. The coins covered the reigns of King Edward VI in the 1550s, Queen Elizabeth I, James I and Charles I
A halfcrown from Charles I reign, with a datemark from 1643. The coins covered the reigns of King Edward VI in the 1550s, Queen Elizabeth I, James I and Charles I

The coins are believed to have been buried for safekeeping by a farmer in 1644 as the English Civil War raged around him.

The owner never returned to retrieve his savings and is likely to have been killed in the conflict. Over the next four centuries the coins had been repeatedly struck by a farmer's plow and scattered over a wide area in the field. 

The coins covered the reigns of King Edward VI in the 1550s, Queen Elizabeth I, James I and Charles I. Some of the Elizabeth and James' coins had been defaced by being scratched, probably by a former Catholic owner in protest at their protestant views and the reformation of the Catholic Church.

Spink coin specialist Ella Mackenzie added: 'This ensemble encompasses the most unstable time in our nation's history.

'These coins circulated in the pockets of a crucially formative period for England in so many ways: from constitutional, to religious, socio-economic and obviously political.

'Being able to handle this hoard has been a rare privilege.'

Britain has a rich history of Civil War hoards, with almost 400 cases documented around the country.

However, the auctioneers said it is still rare for them to come up for public sale.

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