Western Daily Press

New coin honours inventor of television

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JOHN Logie Baird, the inventor of the first working television, will be celebrated with a new 50p coin, said the Royal Mint.

The life and work of the

Scottish engineerin­g pioneer will be honoured by the commemorat­ive piece as part of the national coin maker’s tribute to innovation in science.

It was designed to mark the 75th anniversar­y of the death of the “Father of Television”, who lived from 1888 to 1946.

The coin, pictured, depicts a graphic image of a broadcast transmissi­on, featuring concentric circles pulsing outward from a silhouette of the Crystal Palace mast in London, the site of Mr Logie Baird’s television station and transmitte­r.

Mr Logie Baird achieved renown after managing to relay a static image in 1924, and in 1928 he demonstrat­ed the first transatlan­tic TV transmissi­on from London to New York.

His grandson, Ian Baird, said: “The Baird family feels extremely honoured that The Royal Mint has chosen to recognise my grandfathe­r’s contributi­ons in this way.

“He was involved in both the technology and the progress of television broadcasti­ng and the coin design illustrate­s his dual role as a pioneer in the scientific world as well as in a brand-new medium of communicat­ion.”

The coins are available in limited edition Gold Proof, Silver Proof, Silver Proof Piedfort (a thicker coin), as well as Brilliant Uncirculat­ed editions, with prices ranging from £10 to £1,005.

The son of a clergyman, Mr Logie Baird was born in Helensburg­h on Scotland’s west coast and went on to study electrical engineerin­g at Glasgow’s Royal Technical College.

Clare Maclennan, a director of commemorat­ive coins at The Royal Mint, said: “The design represents Baird’s accomplish­ments and the invention of broadcast transmissi­on, which has shaped culture and entertainm­ent as we know it today.

“It has been a pleasure and privilege to work with the Baird family to commemorat­e a true British icon and a pioneer of one of the greatest scientific discoverie­s of the 20th century.”

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