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Business News Business News Latest news from Greater Birmingham Chambers of Commerce Historic coin is conference Trump card By John Lamb


A flash of inspiration when the deputy vice- chancellor of Birmingham City University tuned in to an American reality TV show called Pawn Stars has resulted in a replica of a 227-year-old coin produced in Birmingham being presented to President Trump. Professor Julian Beer, president of the British American Business Council (BABC) Midlands, was watching the programme which chronicles the daily activities of a Los Angeles pawn shop when it featured a rare coin, called the Large Eagle Washington Cent. He was captivated by its history and Birmingham’s involvement and decided to have 400 reproduced by the University’s School of Jewellery for delegates attending the BABC transatlantic conference in Birmingham. The first two commemorative pewter coins


minted were presented to US Ambassador Robert “Woody” Johnson during the conference gala dinner at Birmingham Town Hall, with one for him to pass on to President Trump. All other delegates attending the conference


at the Royal Birmingham Conservatoire were also presented with the coin as a memento. Professor Beer said: “I had just taken on


the BABC presidency and was thinking about a forthcoming trade mission to Chicago coinciding with the BABC Conference last year. “I also thought about the significance


of trade between the Midlands and North America and the historical relationship between us. While idling, I was watching an American show which often uncovered American historical artefacts and that’s when I saw the coin – the Washington Eagle Cent. “The guy who was examining the


coin mentioned that it had never been legal tender and that it was rare but he


“We then set about trying to reproduce a


limited edition as special gifts for our North American friends in Chicago but, could not pull it off in time. However, with us securing the 2018 Conference we thought it was a great time to do it as a unique reminder of our special relationship.” With 3D computer-aided-design (CAD) imaging,


the University’s School of Jewellery reproduced the Large Eagle Washington Cent coin, exemplifying how Birmingham is often referred to as ‘the workshop of the world’. A master pattern was created and used to


create a mould using high temperature rubber. The coins were then cast in pewter by the AE Williams family, who are based in Digbeth and have been making the alloy since 1779. The original Large Eagle Washington Cent was


Julian Beer (left) presents replicas of the Large Eagle Washington Cent to Ambassador Johnson and delivery to President Trump. Below: Historic: The reproduced Large Eagle Washington Cent


would have to get an expert opinion. The expert, to paraphrase, said that it had been made and shipped over by an ‘enterprising bunch of Brummies’. They had designed and made the coin and another smaller one in Birmingham when they heard that the newly-independent America was looking to produce its own coinage. “They had also used their distribution and supply network in America to get samples to Senators and Congressmen


and one finally landed up with President Washington, who rejected the coin. “However, when I heard this I was


struck that if there was ever a story of entrepreneurialism which depicted the history of our trade relationship here in the Midlands with North America then this was a great example.


one of two coins commissioned in 1791 by Birmingham firm W and Alexander Walker. Designed by one of the world’s finest engravers at the time, John Gregory Hancock, the federal coins – with the bust of President George Washington on the obverse and an American eagle on the reverse – were produced at Obadiah Westwood’s mint in the city. Although both the Small and Large Eagle


Washington Cent coins were well made, they never became a circulated currency after Washington favoured a national mint to control coin production.


Song ties relationship together


A singer from the Royal Birmingham Conservatoire performed ‘Helpless’ from the smash Broadway and West End musical hit Hamilton during the gala dinner for the BABC conference. In a poignant link to US history, Margaret


Rhodes sang the number from the sell-out stage sensation which is about the life of American Founding Father Alexander Hamilton, who played a pivotal part in reshaping the transatlantic relationship.


July/August 2018 CHAMBERLINK5


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