A public transit official working for the city of Leeds found the coin while counting bus and tram fares. Now, his grandson has donated it to Leeds Museums and Galleries ...
Coin used to pay for bus ticket in Leeds found to be 2,000 years old - The coin was given to a local bus driver decades ago and kept in a chest ever since ...
Peter Edwards was gifted the Spanish coin by his grandfather in the 1950s in Leeds, England ...
A coin once used to pay a bus fare in Leeds has been identified as a 2,000-year-old Carthaginian coin from Spain and is now part of the Leeds Museums collection.
The origins of a bronze coin that someone used to pay for a bus journey in Leeds in the 1950s have been revealed after more than 70 years. The remarkable piece was discovered by James Edwards, who ...
The coin was handed down to Peter Edwards from his grandfather in the 1950s.
The ancient coin was probably minted in what is now Spain in the first century B.C., but no one knows why it was used to pay a 1950s transport fare.
An ancient Phoenician coin more than 2,000 years old, once unknowingly used to pay a bus fare in the British city of Leeds, has now ...
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