This is a beautiful item. It is a 1887 Shilling, the Queen Victoria “jubilee” head type, that was gilded, then enameled, then encased in sterling and glass. At the top there's a hole that suggests there might have been a bail making this a pendant. At the very bottom there are three hallmarks. One has proven to be almost completely impossible to photograph. I have tried a number of different methods, including my usb microscope.
I think the leftmost mark, the one hardest to capture, is HH, then there's a vary chubby anchor, and on the other side of the ball is a lower case a.
Now In Birmingham there is Hannah Howard, HH, and the a *could* be 1900 and the anchor *could* be for Birmingham. That would also make this piece being made thirteen years after the coin was minted and in itself seems odd. With all of those could's, that's why I brought it here...











