£1 - Sir Isaac Newton £5 - Duke of Wellington; George Stephenson; Elizabeth Fry; Winston Churchill £10 - Florence Nightingale; Charles Dickens; Charles Darwin; Jane Austen £20 - William Shakespeare; Michael Faraday; Sir Edward Elgar; Adam Smith; (JMW Turner - in 2020) £50 - Sir Christopher Wren; Sir John Houblon; James Watt & Matthew Boulton; Seems...
Brilliant, and there are many more who deserve a place.....Tilly Shilling who was an amazing engineer in the war, saved pilots lives by changing the spitfire engine: Mary Wollstonecraft who pioneered women's education in the 1700s; Helen Bamber who worked with child survivors in the Holocaust; Margaret Damer-Dawson who founded the Womens Police Service; Caroline Harriet Haslett, an electrical engineer and campaigner............so many and so few bank notes.
As others have said, there are a few question-marks about Mary Seacole - worthy though her efforts were, she was a business-woman. I would think Edith Cavell should be a major contender, she lost her life for her country after all, out of a sense of duty.
We haven’t seen the list. Maybe there are men on there too but as ‘the folding stuff’ has tended to be dominated by men, therefore, to diversify, a woman may well be chosen.
£1 - Sir Isaac Newton
£5 - Duke of Wellington; George Stephenson; Elizabeth Fry; Winston Churchill
£10 - Florence Nightingale; Charles Dickens; Charles Darwin; Jane Austen
£20 - William Shakespeare; Michael Faraday; Sir Edward Elgar; Adam Smith; (JMW Turner - in 2020)
£50 - Sir Christopher Wren; Sir John Houblon; James Watt & Matthew Boulton;
Seems like the balance has been firmly in the favour of 'noteworthy' men....
limited sympathy for Cavell: medical staff are meant to be non-partisan. When they start smuggling soldiers out, they endanger all medical staff. Some historians think she was a spy, too.
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