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William Wyon

William Wyon (1795-1851), born in Birmingham, England was official chief engraver at the Royal Mint from 1828.

In 1834 he modelled the head of Princess Victoria, who was 15 at the time, and this was subsequently used for the City Medal struck in 1837 to celebrate her first visit to the City of London after her accession to the throne. This was the model for the head on the line-engraved postage stamps of 1840-79, the embossed stamps of 1847-54 and the postal stationery 1841-1901. The primary die used for the embossed issue was engraved by Wyon; the 1s and 10d stamps have the initials "ww" along with the die number at the base of the neck.

His design also influenced the surface-printed stamps first printed in 1855. The name of William Wyon is also well known amongst coin and medal collectors because of his prodigious output and artistic skill.

Referenced By

English/British coin Farthing | English/British coin Halfpenny | Farthing | History of the farthing | History of the halfpenny | Penny Black

 

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This article is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License. It uses material from the Wikipedia article "William Wyon".

 

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