From the BBC:
“New face of the Bank of
England's £50 note is revealed”
Computer pioneer and codebreaker
Alan Turing will feature on the new design of the Bank of England's £50 note. He
is celebrated for his code-cracking work that proved vital to the Allies in
World War Two. The £50 note will be the last of the Bank of England collection
to switch from paper to polymer when it enters circulation by the end of 2021. The
note was once described as the "currency of corrupt elites" and is
the least used in daily transactions. However, there are still 344 million £50
notes in circulation, with a combined value of £17.2bn, according to the Bank
of England's banknote circulation figures. "Alan Turing was an outstanding
mathematician whose work has had an enormous impact on how we live today,"
said Bank of England governor Mark Carney. "As the father of computer
science and artificial intelligence, as well as a war hero, Alan Turing's
contributions were far ranging and path breaking. Turing is a giant on whose
shoulders so many now stand."
Why was Turing chosen?
The work of Alan Turing, who was
educated in Sherborne, Dorset, helped accelerate Allied efforts to read German
Naval messages enciphered with the Enigma machine. Less celebrated is the
pivotal role he played in the development of early computers, first at the
National Physical Laboratory and later at the University of Manchester. In
2013, he was given a posthumous royal pardon for his 1952 conviction for gross
indecency following which he was chemically castrated. He had been arrested
after having an affair with a 19-year-old Manchester man. The Bank said his
legacy continued to have an impact on science and society today. Alan Turing played an absolutely
crucial role in Allied victories through his codebreaking work. He is also
considered a towering figure in the development of computing. Yet for decades, the idea of Turing being
featured on a banknote seemed impossible. This will be seen as an attempt to
signal how much has changed in society following the long, ultimately
successful campaign to pardon Turing of his 1952 conviction - under
contemporary laws - for having a homosexual relationship. His work helped cement the concept of the
algorithm - the set of instructions used to perform computations - that are at
the heart of our relationship with computers today. He was also a pioneer in
the field of artificial intelligence: one of his best known achievements in
this field is the Turing Test, which aims to measure whether a machine is
"intelligent". Former Manchester MP and gay rights campaigner John
Leech, who campaigned for Alan Turing's pardon, said: "This is a fitting
and welcome tribute to a true Manchester hero. "But more importantly I hope it will
serve as a stark and rightfully painful reminder of what we lost in Turing, and
what we risk when we allow that kind of hateful ideology to win." The Bank
asked the public to offer suggestions for the scientist whose portrait should
appear on the £50 note. In six weeks, the Bank received 227,299 nominations
covering 989 eligible scientists. A shortlist was drawn up by a committee,
including experts from the field of science, before the governor made the final
decision.
Rosalind Franklin, Stephen
Hawking and Ada Lovelace all appeared on the shortlist
The shortlisted characters, or
pairs of characters, considered were: Mary Anning, Paul Dirac, Rosalind Franklin,
William Herschel and Caroline Herschel, Dorothy Hodgkin, Ada Lovelace and
Charles Babbage, Stephen Hawking, James Clerk Maxwell, Srinivasa Ramanujan,
Ernest Rutherford, Frederick Sanger and Alan Turing. The debate over
representation on the Bank's notes could resurface after this decision. Jane
Austen will continue to be the only woman, apart from the Queen, whose image
will be seen on the four notes. There was also a campaign calling for a
historic figure from a black and ethnic minority background (BAME) to feature
on the new £50 note. In response to Maidstone MP Helen Grant, who raised the
issue in Parliament, the governor said: "The Bank will properly consider
all protected characteristics, and seek to represent on its banknotes
characters reflecting the diversity of British society, its culture and its
values."
How will the banknote change?
Steam engine pioneers James Watt
and Matthew Boulton appear on the current £50 note, issued in 2011. The new £50
Turing note will enter circulation by the end of 2021, Mr Carney announced at
the Science and Industry Museum in Manchester. It will feature: A photo of Turing taken in 1951 by Elliott and
Fry, and part of the National Portrait Gallery's collection A table and
mathematical formulae from Turing's 1936 paper "On Computable Numbers,
with an application to the Entscheidungsproblem" - foundational for
computer science The Automatic Computing Engine (ACE) Pilot Machine - the trial
model of Turing's design and one of the first electronic stored-program digital
computers Technical drawings for the British Bombe, the machine specified by
Turing and one of the primary tools used to break Enigma-enciphered messages A
quote from Alan Turing, given in an interview to The Times newspaper on 11 June
1949: "This is only a foretaste of what is to come, and only the shadow of
what is going to be" His signature from the visitor's book at Bletchley
Park in 1947 Ticker tape depicting Alan Turing's birth date (23 June 1912) in
binary code. The concept of a machine fed by binary tape featured in Turing's
1936 paper. Current Bank of England £5 and £10 notes are plastic - which the
Bank says are more durable, secure and harder to forge. The next version of the
£20, to enter circulation next year, will also be made of the same polymer. So,
the £50 note will be the last of the Bank's collection to change.
Why do we even have a £50 note?
In recent years, there have been
doubts that the £50 note would continue to exist at all. Fears that the largest
denomination note was widely used by criminals and rarely for ordinary
purchases prompted a government-led discussion on whether to abolish it. The
£50 note was described by Peter Sands, former chief executive of Standard
Chartered bank, as the "currency of corrupt elites, of crime of all sorts
and of tax evasion". There has also been considerable discussion over the
future of cash in the UK, as cards and digital payments accelerate and the use
of notes and coins declines. Nevertheless, in October, ministers announced
plans for a new version of the note, to be printed in the UK.
What about other banknotes?
Polymer £5 and £10 notes are
already in circulation, while a £20 design will be issued in 2020. Jane Austen
was chosen to appear on the plastic £10 note after a campaign to represent
women other than the Queen on English notes. In 2015, a total of 30,000 people
nominated 590 famous visual artists for the £20 note, before JMW Turner was
selected with the help of focus groups. He will replace economist Adam Smith on
the note in 2020. Sir Winston Churchill appears on the polymer £5 note. A host of
different people have appeared on banknotes issued in Scotland and Northern
Ireland. Ulster Bank's vertical £5 and £10 notes entered circulation in
Northern Ireland in February.
^ I like the idea of putting people who did
important things on currency even if they aren’t Presidents, Prime Minsters or
Kings/Queens. Alan Turing did a lot to help the British (and the other Allies)
to win World War 2. ^
https://www.bbc.com/news/business-48962557
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