Royal Mint unveils first coin featuring named Black woman from outside UK

538     0
Trevor Sterling, chair of Mary Seacole Trust holds the new collective coin (Image: PA)
Trevor Sterling, chair of Mary Seacole Trust holds the new collective coin (Image: PA)

The Royal Mint has created the first coin to feature a named Black woman from ­outside the UK.

It honours 19th century Jamaican nurse Mary Seacole, who treated British soldiers wounded during the Crimean War. The coin comes seven years after a 12-year campaign which raised £500,000 to honour her with a statue at St Thomas’ Hospital, South London. The coin, which features King Charles on the reverse, was designed by sculptor Martin Jennings, who also created the statue.

Mary Seacole Trust chair Trevor Sterling said: “This coin is a ­significant historical moment. “It pays tribute to Mary Seacole as a symbol of the NHS, diversity, social justice and also in ­understanding the diverse ­contributions that have been made to this country.” Mr Sterling will travel to the Caribbean to present the coin to the Jamaican High Commissioner.

Royal Mint unveils first coin featuring named Black woman from outside UK qhiqqkihiqkkinvMary Seacole overcame racism and injustice to nurse soldiers during the Crimean War (PA)

The Kingston-based Institute of Jamaica will also receive one. Mary was born in 1805 to a ­Scottish soldier father and a Jamaican mother. She considered herself Creole and faced civil rights curbs, including not being allowed to vote, hold public office or pursue professional careers.

Royal Mint unveils first coin featuring named Black woman from outside UKJamaican born nurse Mary Seacole
Royal Mint unveils first coin featuring named Black woman from outside UKThe coin has been created in conjunction with Black History Month (PA)

In 1854, Mary came to England and asked to serve as an Army nurse in Crimea but was blocked. She went anyway and started the British Hotel, near Balaklava, offering comfortable rooms for sick and recovering officers. Mary also risked gunfire on the front line to help gravely wounded troops. She died of a stroke at her home London in 1881.

Teachers, civil servants and train drivers walk out in biggest strike in decadeTeachers, civil servants and train drivers walk out in biggest strike in decade

Martin Fricker

Royal Mint, Soldiers, NHS

Read more similar news:

01.02.2023, 00:01 • Finance
Greggs, Costa & Pret coffees have 'huge differences in caffeine', says report
01.02.2023, 00:58 • News
Baby boy has spent his life in hospital as doctors are 'scared' to discharge him
01.02.2023, 12:12 • Politics
Do you support workers going on strike? Take our poll
01.02.2023, 12:40 • Politics
Sunak branded 'pathetic' for attempt to pin blame on Labour for mass strikes
01.02.2023, 13:13 • News
A twitching eye can sometimes be serious - signs, symptoms and when to see a GP
01.02.2023, 18:05 • News
Major UK hospital declares critical incident as struggling A&E department 'full'
01.02.2023, 21:13 • News
Butcher breast surgeon could have hundreds more victims after old database found
02.02.2023, 09:40 • News
Surprising symptom that 40% of women suffer weeks before a heart attack
02.02.2023, 09:43 • Politics
100,000 nurses and patients sign letter to Rishi Sunak calling for NHS wage rise
02.02.2023, 09:44 • News
Mum slams hospital after baby left disabled - 11 years later NHS admits fault