Bump with a new coin. This is the head of the half penny piece of the Dominion of New England, c. 1914.
In 1914, the British Parliament passed the Bank of New England Act, which established the Central Bank of New England, and bestowing on it the power to mint coins and print money for the Dominion of New England. The exchange rate between the British and New England pound was originally set at 4 British shillings to the New England pound, or 5 New England pounds to the British pound.
The first set of coins and banknotes were designed to mirror the British coins and notes in circulation at the time, leading to some strange coin sets. Some coins were colloquially still called by their British equivalents, as shown in parentheses. Even still in modern parlance, New Englanders will call the 50p coin a 'florin.' This set of coins was discontinued in 1920, and replaced with coins and notes that were more easily divisible with the New England pound.
Coins:
0.5p (Farthing/Ha’penny)
2p
6p
12.5p (Sixpence)
25p (Shilling)
50p (Florin)
62.5p (Half crown)
£1.25 (Crown)
£2.50 (Half-sovereign)
£5 (Sovereign)
£10
£25
Banknotes:
£5
£25
£50