Departing Bank of England governor chooses wartime leader to replace prison reformer on next fiver
- guardian.co.uk, Friday 27 April 2013 13.41 BST
Winston Churchill will feature on the next £5 banknote. Photograph: Bank of England
Sir Winston Churchill will appear on the next Bank of England banknote, joining a select list of "eminent British personalities" including Florence Nightingale and William Shakespeare.
The
wartime leader's face and famous "blood, toil, tears and sweat" quote
on £5 notes will be a lasting legacy for departing Bank governor Sir Mervyn King, who made the final decision on Churchill.
Announcing the choice at Churchill's former home, Chartwell, King suggested £5 notes may even become known as "Winstons".
"It seems entirely appropriate to put Sir Winston on what is probably our most popular note," he said.
"Our
banknotes acknowledge the life and work of great Britons. Sir Winston
Churchill was a truly great British leader, orator and writer. Above
that, he remains a hero of the entire free world. His energy, courage,
eloquence, wit and public service are an inspiration to us all."
Churchill's
portrait from a photograph taken in 1941 will probably appear on £5
notes from 2016 although plans have yet to be finalised, the Bank said.
If it is indeed the £5 note he appears on, he will replace social
reformer Elizabeth Fry and there will no longer be any female figures
celebrated on the back of British banknotes.
Churchill, the first
statesman to feature, will be pictured alongside a view of Westminster
with parliament's clock showing 3 o'clock – the approximate time on 13
May 1940 when Churchill declared in a speech: "I have nothing to offer
but blood, toil, tears and sweat."
The Bank has pictured British personalities on the back of its notes since 1970
and the previous 15 eminent figures chosen have included the composer
Sir Edward Elgar, scientist Michael Faraday and writer Charles Dickens.
Only two, Fry and Nightingale, have been women.
Members of the
public can put forward suggestions, although the Bank will only consider
figures who have made an "indisputable contribution to their particular
field of work". It considers the list of public suggestions when picking a new picture but the governor of the Bank has the final decision.
The
current suggestions list includes Princess Diana, the Beatles, poet
William Blake and naturalist Sir David Attenborough. Lady Thatcher is
not on the most recently available list of public suggestions.
The
new Churchill banknote will be the second time he has appeared on
British money, having become the first commoner to be portrayed on a
British coin – the 1965 crown or five shilling piece.
King added:
"Winston Churchill holds a special place in the affections of our
nation. His wartime leadership inspired the British people, not least
through the power of his oratory. That leadership served as an example
to the free world and helped to ensure the survival of those freedoms,
which we continue to enjoy today."
No comments:
Post a Comment
Thank you for visiting this blogs.