THE HEATON, BIRMINGHAM, AND IMI MINTS Público Deposited

Conteúdo do artigo
  • The E-Sylum: Volume 8, Number 38, September 4, 2005, Article 17

    THE HEATON, BIRMINGHAM, AND IMI MINTS

    Last week I asked, "Can anyone fill us in on how the
    Birmingham Mint came to be owned by IMI?"

    Kavan Ratnatunga writes: "When I wrote up a page on my
    Birmingham Mint Trial specimens, Trial specimens
    I had saved link to Full Story

    I must find out if that collection recently gifted has the
    Ceylon 1965 10 cent trial from the Birmingham Mint which
    I discovered is not in the Royal Mint collection.

    I would like to find out more about the sale of duplicates in
    the late 1960's since my specimen may have originated in
    such a sale and listed in some Auction catalog or sale list."

    [The page Kavan referenced has an image of a letter from
    IMI management from the time of the closure of the mint
    in 1991. It touches on the mint's history - here is an excerpt:

    "The IMI mint dates back to the early years of the twentieth
    century. Then the King's Norton Metal Co Ltd established
    itself an almost rural suburb of Birmingham as a specialist
    manufacturer of coinage strip and coin blanks. This was soon
    followed by a minting department and the Company was
    privileged to supply the British Royal Mint with strip and
    blanks and was entrusted with striking coinage for various
    territories overseas.

    In 1911 and 1912, the King's Norton Metal Co supplied
    bronze blanks for pennies, halfpennies and farthings.
    Subsequently UK coins were minted at King's Norton and
    this led to the recognition of the mint mark KN which has,
    very unobtrusively, appeared on the reverse of many millions
    of coins for a large number of different companies."

    King's Norton eventually became part of Imperial Metal
    Industries, or IMI. The letter goes on to state:

    "Following IMI's purchase of The Birmingham Mint Ltd,
    the decision was taken to merge it with the IMI mint ...
    Thus we come to the 9th August 1991 as the last day of
    IMI Mint's operation as a commercially independent Mint....
    However, time marches on and about half the Mint's
    employees will move on to The Birmingham Mint."

    So... the IMI mintmark was KN and these operations
    ceased in 1991. But what about The Birmingham Mint?
    Is (or was) this entity the survivor of the Heaton Mint
    of the H mintmark?

    I found the following article online about the
    early history of the Heaton Mint:

    "The story of the Heaton Mint begins in 1850, when Ralph
    Heaton II purchased Matthew Boulton's Soho Mint equipment.

    Boulton was a industrialist who set up the Soho Manufactory
    in Birmingham, England, later teaming up with James Watt to
    produce the most advanced version of the steam engine, one
    that would literally herald the advent of the industrial revolution.

    The Soho Mint, which was established around 1788, had
    recently gone out of business. So when an ad appeared in the
    Birmingham Gazette on April 1, 1850, it created "great
    excitement at the Heaton firm," writes James O. Sweeny in
    his book A Numismatic History of the Birmingham Mint.

    By the end of April 1850, Heaton had purchased the four
    Soho Mint steam-powered screw presses that were auctioned
    off by Fuller and Horsey Auctioneers. "Though they were
    made in the period 1790-1810," Sweeny writes, "they were
    still reasonably modern in 1850; similar machines were the
    mainstay of the Royal Mint until 1880."

    "By the late 1880s, things were going well for the company,
    which had just completed an order from the Chinese government
    to provide a complete mint (with 90 presses) in Canton. By the
    time Ralph Heaton III was ready to retire, Sweeny notes he
    "decided to convert the family business into a publicly held
    limited liability corporation." So in 1889 the new company
    became known as The Mint, Birmingham, Limited."

    Full Story

    Roger deWardt Lane pointed out another page on the
    WBCC web site that confirms the connection:

    "Ralph Heaton bought what remained of the Soho mint in
    1850. The mint of Ralph Heaton and Sons (which later became
    “The Mint, Birmingham Ltd.” in around 1860) was noted for
    making some of the Bronze Victorian pennies of Great Britain.
    The "H" mintmark appeared on a number of these issues but
    not all of them. The use of the "H" mintmark did not cease with
    the change of name of the mint. In fact the "H" mintmark can be
    seen on many twentieth century coins, usually of countries with
    strong links to Britain (e.g. British West Africa, East Africa and
    Hong Kong).... After some time, in 1974, the name of this mint
    was again changed, this time to “The Birmingham Mint Ltd”."

    Full Story

    Roger also discovered this timeline of the IMI mint history: Full Story

    So, the recently-closed IMI mint was indeed final incarnation
    of the original Soho and Heaton Mints. -Editor]

URL da fonte Data de publicação
  • 2005-09-04
Volume
  • 8

Relacionamentos

Autor do PNN