388) Winston
Churchill: A new 5 Pound circulating Polymer Banknote issued by the Bank of
England on 13.09.2016:
A new polymer circulating Banknote
was issued by Bank of England (BOE) depicting Winston Churchill on 13.09.2016 in
Britain. This has primarily been necessitated, as Great Britain has circulation
Banknotes which can be easily laundered.
Why
was Churchill chosen?
Winston Churchill was one
of the greatest statesmen of all time and is the only Prime Minister to win a
Nobel Prize for Literature. In addition, he is said to be a kind of hero of the
“entire free world”. It is believed by many that “his energy, courage,
eloquence, wit and public service are an inspiration to all.”
Winston Churchill was
named as the greatest Briton of all time in a 2002 poll and is widely regarded
as the one of most influential people in British history.
Churchill once said “a
nation that forgets its past has no future”.
BOE
Banknotes are supposedly “repositories” of the United Kingdom’s “collective
memory” and are “testaments” to the outstanding achievements of the nation’s
“greatest” individuals.
Interestingly, the Bank of
England believes that like Churchill, the new polymer Banknote will also “stand
the test of time”. It is cleaner, being more resilient to dirt and moisture and
safer with better security features. It is stronger, making it longer and more
environmentally friendly”.
The
“murkier” side of Churchill’s character notwithstanding:
“Never was so much owed by
one man to so many”:
Despite his life-long fame
and upper-class origins, Churchill always struggled to keep his income at a
level which would fund his extravagant life-style.
It is believed that though,
Churchill was “respected and adored for his refusal to surrender” to the Axis forces
– his principles extended to not
giving up his cash to those whom he owed money.
He
was notoriously wayward with money, spending tens of thousands of pounds and
Indian Rupees on drink and gambling.
Interestingly, his
financial situation also affected his love life, before his marriage to
Clementine Hozier in 1904.
In 1896, Churchill
arrived in Bangalore, India, as a young army officer and here he was trying to
woo Pamela Plowden, the daughter of a British Civil servant.
In a letter addressed Pamela
Plowden, Churchill is believed to have mentioned that he feared that his
financial situation would be a threat to a marriage between them. Alarmed at
his spendthrift and debt-ridden ways, she chose to marry elsewhere (the Earl of
Lytton).
By 1898, he had run
up several unpaid debts while on army service in Bangalore, whereafter, he left to fight in the North-West Frontier, a
couple of years later (now in Pakistan) in the Mohmand campaign in Malakand.
He also had outstanding
debts at the Secunderabad Club, and the sum has grown into a substantial sum if
calculated at present day valuation.
In June 1899, he is
listed as one of the 17 defaulters for an unpaid bill of 13 rupees at the
exclusive Bangalore Club formed by British Officers in 1868. The Club is today
one of India’s most elite clubs. The Club’s records still show him as a
defaulter. The Club authorities state that it is “seldom that the Prime
Minister of a country would be owing something to a club in another country”.
The Club ultimately wrote off the unrecovered sum from Churchill and the other
defaulters “as unrecoverable”.
Henry Poole & Co.,
Saville Row’s first tailor, still has an outstanding bill of 197 pounds
(roughly about 13,000 pounds – present day) over a bill to repair a Trinity
House uniform, a minister’s uniform and a yachting cap for Churchill in 1937
as mentioned in the tailor’s archives/records.
In another South London
business, he had outstanding bills too for repairs carried out to “Churchill’s
satisfaction”. He failed to pay for the repair of his suit to Abe Green in
South London during World War II, despite repeated requests/reminders.
In the Wall Street Crash
of 1929, he lost around $50,000 (the equivalent of around 500,000 pounds today.
In his thirties, he is believed
to have borrowed sums of money equivalent to 2.5 million pounds – at present day
valuations - almost every year after his marriage, when he was raising his
family of a wife and four children. He would take annual holidays to the South
of France, where he would go on spending sprees at lavish casinos and felt no
qualms about spending upto 40,000 pounds on such trips.
In a year when he vowed to
cut down his drinking to win a bet with a friend who bet that Churchill could
not do so, Churchill’s bills for alcohol came to about 900 pounds (equivalent
of 54,000 Pounds today).
In gambling he lost
some 66,000 Francs (about 55,000 Pounds) in a single holiday at a casino in
Cannes in 1936, among other such indiscretions with spending huge sums
of money.
He smoked about a dozen Havana
cigars a day, a habit that he had inculcated during his deployment during the
Cuban War of Independence in 1895, which cost him about 1,300 Pounds a month.
As
a result of his financial indiscretions, he spent many years on the brink of
financial ruin.
By 1939, just
before his election as Prime Minister in 1940, his overdraft had reached 35,000
Pounds (equivalent to more than 2.00 million present day) and his creditors
were raising demands of immediate payment of 12,000 Pounds to bring his
outstanding credit within some kind of respectability (about 720,000 Pounds
present day).
At
the last minute, he was saved from bankruptcy by secret benefactors, after he
refused to change his extravagant life-style.
In 1949, during a
two-month period he along with his friends drank 454 bottles of champagne, 311
bottles of wine, 69 bottles of port, 58 bottles of brandy, 58 bottles of sherry
and 56 bottles of Black Label whisky, running up a huge outstanding bill.
Most
people assumed, given his flagrant life-style that he was very rich as such had
no hesitation in providing him goods and services, only to learn of his
extravagant ways and debts later.
Many
Britons offer to clear his debts - present day, but the
descendants/managers of the creditors, prefer to show his legacy of outstanding
debts in their books, rather than wiping them off their records.
Winston
Churchill was awarded the Nobel Prize for Literature in 1953:
Churchill was a prolific
writer of books and was awarded the Nobel Prize for Literature in 1953 “for his
mastery of historical and biographical description as well as for brilliant
oratory in defending exhalted human values”.
(Strangely, this citation,
seems to be at variance with his approach to India’s Freedom Struggle from
British Rule when he opposed Mahatma Gandhi’s peaceful civil disobedience
movement in the 1920s and 1930s stating that the Round Table Conferences were a
frightful prospect and the Mahatma Gandhi “ought to be lain bound hand and foot
at the gates of Delhi, and then trampled on by an enormous elephant with the
new Viceroy seated on its back”. He even favoured letting Mahatma Gandhi die,
if he went on a hunger strike and he wanted Gandhism to be grappled and crushed
at all cost. Arrogance, perhaps? Or the fear that the “Jewel in the British
Crown” was fast slipping out of the clutches of the British Empire).
His other literary
contributions included a novel, two biographies, three volumes of memoirs and
several histories. Two of his most famous works, published after his first
premiership were his six-volume memoir “The Second World War” and “A History of
the English-Speaking Peoples”, a four volume history covering the period from “Caesar’s
invasions of Britain (55 BC) to the beginning of the First World War (1914)”. A
number of volumes of Churchill’s speeches were also published in the USA titled
“Blood, Sweat and Tears”.
Royalties
from these works earned him some money, but these were not enough to finance
his lavish life-style, with the result he was always in debt or not in a
position to pay his outstanding bills.
Winston Churchill, as an
officer in the British army had been in about 50 armed conflicts in at least four
theatres with the adversaries of the British Empire – in Afghanistan, in
Africa, in Egypt etc. and was always in the thick of battle, sometimes against overwhelming
odds.
The Front Cover of the compilation of four volumes written by Winston Churchill titled “Frontiers and Wars” from the library of my friend Dennis Ksing.
The Back Cover of the four story compilation of Winston Churchill’s works reads:
The Front Cover of the compilation of four volumes written by Winston Churchill titled “Frontiers and Wars” from the library of my friend Dennis Ksing.
The Back Cover of the four story compilation of Winston Churchill’s works reads:
“Frontiers and Wars”
brings together Sir Winston Churchill’s splendid early works, which he wrote as
a soldier and war correspondent in the far reaches of the British Empire at the
turn of the century. Here in their entirety are “The Story of the Malakand
Field Force” a thrilling report of frontier warfare in British India, “The
River War” covering the history of the Sudan, the rise of Arab nationalism and
battles with the British and Egyptian forces, “London to Ladysmith” with its
vivid account of the author’s capture by the Boers and his escape during the
South African War and “Hamilton’s March”, a dramatic narrative of the fortunes
of General Hamilton’s army after the relief of Ladysmith.”
The circulating 5 Pounds Banknote issued by Bank of England (BOE):
The Front of the new 5 Pounds Banknote issued in September 2016 by Bank of England (BOE), inter alia, depicting QE II
On the Front of the new Polymer 5 Pound Banknote is a portrait of Queen Elizabeth II with the words “5 Pounds” (in words &
symbol), “Bank of England”. Around the Queen’s portrait is depicted the symbol
“5” several times, together with the initials of her name “EIIR”.
The Back of the new 5 Pounds Banknote issued in September 2016 by Bank of England (BOE), inter alia depicting Winston Churchill. The serial number of this Banknote is AE55 766196. At the bottom is written "The Governor & Company of the Bank of England".
On the Back of the new Polymer 5 Pound Banknote is
depicted:
A portrait of Winston Churchill from a photograph taken in
Ottawa by Yousuf Karsh on 30.12.1941, together with a view of Westminster and the Elizabeth Tower from with the hands of the Great Clock, Big Ben, at 3.00 o’clock – the
approximate time on 13.05.1940, when Winston Churchill declared in a speech to
the House of Commons: “I have nothing to offer but blood, toil, tears and
sweat”. This declaration is quoted beneath the portrait (No wonder, he had no money to pay up his various outstanding debts
accumulated through his lavish life-style. Perhaps, the new Polymer Banknote
depicting him could be used by the British government to pay his outstanding
debts and clear his name as a “defaulter” in all such cases).
A background image of the Nobel Prize medal which he was
awarded in 1953 for literature, together with the wordings of the prize citation. The trademark Nobel Prize
has been reproduced with permission from the Nobel Foundation.
This Banknote has been printed by De La Rue, the Banknote printing major, who have co-ordinated with the Bank of England to incorporate several innovative features in this Banknote, to thwart counterfeiters.
This Banknote has been printed by De La Rue, the Banknote printing major, who have co-ordinated with the Bank of England to incorporate several innovative features in this Banknote, to thwart counterfeiters.
Some
Security Features on this Banknote:
The
Polymer Banknotes last 2 ½ to 3 times longer than the presently circulating
Banknotes and the “new fiver” is expected to last at least for five years. By
2015, anti-counterfeiting measures had reduced the incidence of counterfeiting
in this denomination to around 0.0075%.
The new
Bank of England (BOE) 5 Pound Banknotes also have several security
features which will “raise the bar” for counterfeiters and can better withstand
being repeatedly folded into wallets or scrunched up inside pockets and can
also survive a spin in the washing machine. Some
of these are a see-through window depicting Queen Elizabeth II’s portrait and a
picture of Big Ben in gold foil.
See-through
window: There is a large see-through window on the Banknote.
A clearly defined portrait of the Queen is printed on the window with the words
“5 Pounds Bank of England” printed twice around the edge.
Elizabeth
Tower: A finely detailed metallic image of the Elizabeth
Tower is positioned over the window. The foil is Gold on the front of the
Banknote and Silver on the Back of the Banknote. When the Banknote is tilted, a
multi-coloured rainbow effect can be seen.
Coloured
border: Around the edge of the window is a coloured border
which changes from purple to green when the Banknote is tilted. The Pound
symbol in the window also changes from purple to green. This effect can be seen
on the Front and Back of the Banknote.
Foil
Patches: On the front of the Banknote, below the
see-through window, is a silver foil patch. When the Banknote is tilted the
word “Five” changes to “Pounds” and a multi-coloured rainbow effect can be
seen.
On the Front of the Banknote, above the
see-through window, is a silver foil
patch containing an image of the coronation crown which appears in 3D.
When the Banknote is tilted, a multi-coloured rainbow effect can be seen.
On the Back of the Banknote, there is a
circular green foil patch which contains the word “BLENHEIM”. It is immediately
behind the crown on the front.
Checking
the polymer and the raised print: The Banknote is printed
on polymer which is a thin and flexible plastic material. By running one’s
finger across the Front of the Banknote, one can feel the raised print in areas
such as the words “Bank of England” and in the bottom right corner, around the
number “5”.
The
print quality: The printed lines and colours on the
Banknote are sharp, clear and free from smudges or blurred edges.
Micro-lettering:
By using a magnifying glass, by looking closely beneath the Queen’s portrait on
can see the value of the Banknote written in small letters and numbers.
Polymer
Banknotes are manufactured from a transparent plastic film, specially coated
with an ink layer that enables it to carry the printed design features of
Banknotes.
Introduction
of Bank of England 10 Pounds Banknotes in the near future:
The 10 Pound Bank of
England polymer Banknote will feature Jane Austen and will be issued in the
summer of 2017, while the new polymer 20 Pound Banknote will feature JMW Turner
and will be issued by 2020. All these Banknotes will be smaller by around 15%
from presently circulating Banknotes.
Bank of England has
presently deferred taking a decision on the 50 Pound Banknote and will take a
decision to print it in polymer or not, in due course after seeing the
experience of the smaller denominations.
The Bank of England will
initially issue 440 million of the new 5 Pound Banknotes, while the old
Banknotes, portraying Elizabeth Fry will cease to be legal tender on 05.05.2017
and be withdrawn from circulation.
The
Three Scottish Banks will also be issuing 5 and 10 Pounds Polymer Banknotes:
The three Scottish
Banknote issuing Banks are also printing their next 5 and 10 Pound circulation
polymer Banknotes – Clydesdale Bank has issued their circulation Polymer 5
Pound Banknote on 27.09.2016, Bank of Scotland on 04.10.2016 while Royal Bank
of Scotland will issue their 5 Pound polymer Banknote on 27.10.16. The three
Banks will also issue their new polymer 10 Pound Banknotes in September-October
2017.
The 5 Pounds Banknotes
issued by the Scottish Banks will have the dimensions of 125 mm x 65 mm and the
10 Pounds Banknotes will measure 132 mm x 69 mm.
Clydesdale
Bank, Scotland has issued Great Britain’s first ever Polymer Banknote in the
denomination of 5 Pounds in March 2015:
Interestingly,
the credit of issuing the first polymer 5 Pound Banknote goes to Clydesdale
Bank.
For Clydesdale Bank’s
first ever Polymer Five Pound Banknote, celebrated the 125th
Anniversary of one of the greatest innovative Scottish achievements – Sir
William Arrol’s Forth Bridge with the image of the iconic Forth Bridge (on the Back) and
the Engineer whose company built the bridge, Sir William Arrol (on the Front). For more on
this Banknote, please read my post:
Apparently, the Bank of England issue of Winston Churchill's 5 Pounds Banknote has managed to beat Clydesdale Bank to the issue of a Polymer Circulating Banknote.
Why
Polymer Banknotes?
Polymer
Banknotes are:
- Resistant to dirt and
moisture so they stay cleaner for longer than paper Banknotes.
- More secure so will
provide enhanced counterfeit resilience.
-
They are more environmentally friendly than paper due to their durability. Polymer Banknotes last at least two and a half times longer than paper
Banknotes which make them more environmentally friendly.
-These Banknote differs from regular paper
Banknotes in that it is smaller, stronger, cleaner and made of plastic,
resulting in more safe and secure banking.
- Polymer Banknotes are
also better for the environment, because, the issuing Bank has to print fewer
Banknotes, which translates into less energy being used in manufacturing and
cash transportation. When a polymer Banknote reaches the end of its life cycle,
it can be recycled into new plastic products. As such Bank of England will be
issuing their next 5, 10 and 20 Pound Banknotes on polymer, a thin flexibly
plastic, because polymer Banknotes last longer, stay cleaner and are harder to
counterfeit than paper Banknotes.
Blenheim
Palace – The ancestral Residence of Winston Churchill:
Blenheim Castle was built
in the early 18th Century to celebrate the victory over the
French in the War of Spanish Succession.
In particular, it was
built as a gift from Queen Anne to the 1st Duke of Marlborough, John
Churchill, the military commander who led the Allied forces in the Battle of
Blenheim on 13.08.1704. The Queen
granted his family the ruined Manor and park at Woodstock alongwith 240,000
pounds which was to build a house to mark the occasion.
The palace is also the
birthplace and ancestral home of Winston Churchill and it was here that Winston
proposed to Clementine Hozier in the Temple of Diana on the estate.
He
always maintained that two of the best things in his life happened at the
Blenheim Palace – it was here that he was born and it was here that he proposed
to his would be wife Clementine.
Differently coloured coasters depicting Blenheim Palace, from the collection of Dennis and Maggie Ksing, who purchased it from a Souvenir shop while on a visit to the Blenheim Palace
Differently coloured coasters depicting Blenheim Palace, from the collection of Dennis and Maggie Ksing, who purchased it from a Souvenir shop while on a visit to the Blenheim Palace
(The above Banknote has
been brought for my collection by Jayant Biswas collected during his travels to
the United Kingdom recently. Images scanned and post researched and written by
Rajeev Prasad)
Links:
Bank of England Banknotes:
1) A Ten Pounds Banknote issued on Charles Dickens (Writer) also depicting a cricket match from his novel "The Pickwick Papers"
2) A Ten Pound Banknote issued on Charles Darwin (English Naturalist) also depicting the HMS Beagle, Darwin's magnifying glass, a humming-bird & flora that he may have seen on his voyage.
3) A Five Pounds Banknote issued on George Stephenson (an Engineer) also depicting "Rocket" his Railway Locomotive and Skeene Bridge on theStockton Darlington Railway (1825) - since withdrawn
4) A 20 Pounds Banknote issued on Michael Faraday (a Scientist) issued in 1991, since withdrawn from circulation in 2001
5) Great Britain's first circulating polymer Banknote issued by the Bank of England in the denomination of 5 Pounds on 13.09.2016
Inspirations from Scottish History (Clydesdale Bank Banknotes):
1) The Legend of King Bruce & the Spider on Banknotes
2) Commemorating Sir William Arrol and his creation the Forth Rail Bridge by issues of Britain's first ever 5 Pound Polymer Banknote
Banknotes from Bank of Scotland:
1) The Ryder Cup Commemorative Banknote: A 5 Pounds Banknote issued by the Royal Bank of Scotland in 2014
British Crown Dependencies:
1) Specimen Banknotes from the States of Jersey
2) Coinage and Currency from the States of Jersey
3) Currency & Coinage of the Bailiwick of Guernsey
4) Currency & Coinage of Gibraltar : An Overseas Territory of Great Britain
5) Coinage of Gibraltar: (A British Overseas Territory): An Uncirculated Decimal Coin Collection Set minted by the Tower Mint, UK in 2010
6) The Isle of Man: An Uncirculated Decimal Coin Collection Set minted by Pobjoy Mint, UK in 2015
7) The Centenary of the ill-fated Titanic (15.04.1912 - 15.04.2012): An Alderney Five Pound Coin Commemorating the Maritime Legend
8) "Man of Steel": A Superman Movie: A set of stamps brought out in 2013 by Jersey post, the States of Jersey, commemorating Henry William Dalgliesh Cavill who played Superman in the Movie
9) Coins & Currency of Bermuda
10) The Bailiwick of Jersey - Presently circulating coinage - Pounds and Pence
11) St. Helena & Ascension Islands: An Uncirculated Coin Set from 2003
12) The Legend of the "HMAV Bounty" is interwoven with the heritage of the Pitcairn Islands: An uncirculated coin set from Pitcairn Islands in 2009 depicting the icons/relics of the Bounty minted by the New Zealand Mint
13) Currency of the Falkland Islands: A British Overseas Territory (BOT) Pounds & Pence
Famous Battles:
1) Bicentenary of the Battle of Waterloo and Napoleon's Exile to St. Helena: (Part I): A One Crown Commemorative coin issued by the Ascension Island (minted by Pobjoy Mint UK)
2) Bicentenary of the Battle of Waterloo and Napoleon's Exile to st. Helena: (Part II) 1) A 5 GBP Coin issued by the Royal Mint UK. 2) A"Drie Landen Zilverset" ( ot the "Three Lands Silver set") containing coins issued by the Royal Dutch Mint including coins of Netherlands, Belgium and UK
3) Commemorating the 75th Anniversary of the Battle of Britain by issuing a 50 Pence coin by the Royal Mint UK
Gold Coins:
1) Gold Sovereigns issued in 2013 & 2014 by MMTC-PAMP in India under licence from the Royal Mint, UK, carrying the "I" Mint Mark
2) Gold Half-Sovereigns minted by MMTC-PAMP in India in 2014 under licence from the Royal Mint UK bearing the "I" Mint Mark
Silver Coins:
1) A 20 Pound Silver coin minted for the first timr by the royal Mint UK: reverse design carries the famous St. George slaying the dragon design found on Gold Sovereigns
British India Coinage:
1) East India Company Quarter Anna Copper Coin which is one of the first issues under the Coinage Act 1835
2) Victoria Coinage: When she was Queen and afterwards Empress
3) Edward VII: King & Emperor Coinage
4) George V King Emperor Coinage
5) George VI: The last of the British India Emperors Coinage
Other British Royalty:
1) Queen Elizabeth II's Diamond Jubilee Celebrations (1952-2012): A Five Pound Commemorative coin issued by the Royal Mint, UK
2) Commemorating Queen Elizabeth II's Coronation in 1953: A Five Pound Coin minted by the Royal Mint UK in 2013, depicting the Imperial State Crown
3) The Royal Coat of Arms of the UK: Great British 2012 Coin Set (Uncirculated) issued by the Royal Mint UK
4) Prince George's Christening Ceremony celebrated with coins issued by the Royal Mint UK in 2013
5) The British Empire: A Case of Numismatic "segregation": (Guest Post by Rahul Kumar)
6) 1) The Portrait Collection: Various Portraits of Queen Elizabeth II on Coinage 2) The Fourth & Final Circulating coinage of the Portrait designed by Ian Rank-Broadley and the First Edition of the portrait of the Queen made by Jody Clark
British Coinage:
1) The contribution of the Great British One-Pound coins in keeping alive the historical legends/emblems/heritage of the UK (1983 onwards)
2) Transformation of a Five shilling Coin (Crown) into the UK Twenty-five Pence & then the Five Pound Coin
3) Transformation of the Two Shilling Coin (Florin) Coin into the UK Ten Pence
4) The 350th Anniversary of the Guinea: A Two Pound Coin issued by the Royal Mint UK celebrating the milestone
Commemorative British Coinage:
1) Commemorating the Bicentenary of Charles Dickens: A Two pound coin celebrating his literary contributions during the Victorian Era
2) Commemorating 50 Years of the World Wildlife Fund (WWF) - presently called the World Wide Fund for Nature by issue of a Fifty Pence coin by the Royal Mint, UK
3) Coins commemorating London Olympics & Paralympics (2012)
4) Commemorating 150 Years of the London Underground : Two pound Coins minted by the Royal Mint UK, showing the "Roundel" logo and a train emerging from a tunnel
5) Commemorating the 100th Birth anniversary of Christopher Ironside with his" Royal Arms" design on a 50 Pence coin issued by the Royal Mint, UK
Postage Stamps:
1) 800th Anniversary of the Magna Carta - the Universal Guidepost to Liberty and Freedom
2) "Man of Steel": A Superman Movie: A set of stamps brought out in 2013 by Jersey post, the States of Jersey, commemorating Henry William Dalgliesh Cavill who played Superman in the Movie
3) Celebrating the Centenary of Agatha Christie's first Crime Novel and 40th Anniversary of her passing away by issue of a set of 6 stamps by Royal Mail, UK
Punam Saxena has commented:
ReplyDelete"I've often wondered at his popularity".
I don't blame the Brits. Supposedly he is the best they have to offer as a replacement for Elizabeth Fry , the well known English prison reformer, social reformer and, as a Quaker, a Christian philanthropist who is also referred to as the "angel of prisons", on the presently circulating fiver.
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