In 1852 the Mint won a contract to produce a new series of
coins for France. In this the Mint pioneered the minting of
bronze. Ralph Heaton III (son of Ralph II) took key workers
to Marseilles to equip and operate the French mint there, staying
to fulfil the contract, and producing 750 tons of Napoleon III
bronze coins from 1853-7.
La Casa de la Moneda en 1852 ganó un contrato para producir
una nueva serie de monedas de Francia. En este sentido, la Casa
de la Moneda ha sido pionera en la acuñación de
bronce. Ralph Heaton III (hijo de Ralph II) tomó clave
a los trabajadores a Marsella para equipar y poner en funcionamiento
la Casa de la Moneda francesa allí, quedarse para cumplir
el contrato, y la producción de 750 toneladas de monedas
de bronce Napoleon III 1853-7.
The Mint at Heaton produced hundreds of millions of coins for
countries around the world from 1850 until its demise in 2006.
This is a short story of what happened to that mint.
The mint at Heaton now known as The Birmingham Mint, was originally
known as Heaton's Mint or Ralph Heaton & Sons. It started
producing tokens and coins in 1850 as a private enterprise,
separate from, but in cooperation with the Royal Mint. For those
who lived in Birmingham or know Birmingham quite well, its factory
was situated in Icknield Street, on the edge of the Jewellery
Quarter. It was created by Ralph Heaton II, using second-hand
coin presses bought from the estate of Matthew Boulton.
Matthew Boulton created the Soho Mint around 1788 but the company
did not survive. It was on April Fool's Day in 1850 that Ralph
Heaton II bought the eqiupment mad eup of four steam-powered
screw presses and six planchet presses for making blanks from
strip metal. These were installed at the Bath Street works,
and in that year trade tokens were struck for use in Australia.
Other coins started to be minted for Chile and for the British
Royal Mint. It also struck coins for Napoleon and for a time
operated the French Mint. They won more and more work and during
its peak struck around 110,000 coins a day. By 1862 it was the
largest private mint in the world. In March 1889 it became a
public limited liability company and renamed The Mint, Birmingham,
Limited. In 1912, its first competition was the Kings Norton
Metal Company. Kings Norton became part of Imperial Chemical
Industries (ICI) in 1926 and was reorganised as part of Imperial
Metal Industries Limited (IMI) in 1962. The Mint started spiralling
downwards. By May 1935 it moved into non-ferrous metal sheet
and tube productions with coins accounting only some 10% of
business. From this time the production of coins became a small
part of the overall business of non-ferrous metal sheet and
tube production. Bomb damage during World War II left the factory
run-down.
In later years, the plant became increasingly busy with the
introduction of the Euro within the European Union; the mint
produced several million €1 and €2 coins. However,
a slump in trade and contractual agreements between them and
the Royal Mint resulted in the sale of the mint in late 2003.
The Mint was acquired by JFT Law & Co Limited who still
produce and sell commemorative coins and medals from a website.
Substantial parts of the plant and machinery were subsequently
purchased by an Indian company, Lord's Security Mint Limited.
The POBJOY Mint purchased the newest high speed presses plus
new tooling. Most of the complex, excluding the Icknield Street
block and the rear, retaining, wall, was demolished in April
2007.
The Birmingham Mint, a coining mint, originally known as Heaton's
Mint or Ralph Heaton & Sons, in Birmingham, England started
producing tokens and coins in 1850 as a private enterprise,
separate from, but in cooperation with the Royal Mint. Its factory
was situated in Icknield Street (grid reference SP057877), on
the edge of the Jewellery Quarter. It was created by Ralph Heaton
II, using second-hand coin presses bought from the estate of
Matthew Boulton.
Ralph Heaton II
Ralph Heaton II (1794-October 1862) was the son of Ralph Heaton
I, an engineer, inventor and businessman in Slaney Street, and
later Shadwell Street. Ralph Heaton II was a die sinker operating
in Shadwell Street independently of his father. On 2 December
1817 Ralph I conveyed to his son land and buildings at 71 Bath
Street to enable him to develop a separate company. Ralph II
engaged in brass founding, stamping and piercing. Brass chandeliers
were made for the newly invented gas lighting and a "bats
wing" burner patented.
[edit] Mint
On 1 April 1850 the auction was announced of equipment from
the defunct Soho Mint, created by Matthew Boulton around 1788.
At the auction on 29 April Ralph Heaton II bought the four steam-powered
screw presses and six planchet presses for making blanks from
strip metal. These were installed at the Bath Street works,
and in that year trade tokens were struck for use in Australia.
In 1851 coins were struck for Chile using the letter H as a
mintmark. The same year copper planchets were made for the Royal
Mint to make into pennies, halfpennies, farthings, half-farthings
and quarter-farthings. In 1852 the Mint won a contract to produce
a new series of coins for France. In this the Mint pioneered
the minting of bronze. Ralph Heaton III (son of Ralph II) took
key workers to Marseilles to equip and operate the French mint
there, staying to fulfil the contract, and producing 750 tons
of Napoleon III bronze coins from 1853-7.
In 1853 the Royal Mint was overwhelmed with producing silver
and gold coins. The Birmingham Mint won its first contract to
strike finished coins for Britain – 500 tons of copper,
struck between August 1853 and August 1855, with another contract
to follow in 1856. These coins had no mint mark to identify
them as from Birmingham. During the peak of operation the four
original Boulton screw presses were striking about 110,000 coins
per day.
As overseas orders increased, particularly for India, the Mint
added a new lever press and further equipment, filling the Bath
Street premises. In 1860 the firm bought a 1-acre (4,000 m2)
plot on Icknield Street (the current site, since enlarged) and
constructed a three storey red brick factory. Completed in 1862
it employed 300 staff. It was at this time the largest private
mint in the world. In 1861 a contract for bronze coins for the
newly unified Italy was signed, the Mint sending blanks and
equipment to Milan to be struck into finished coins by their
staff in Milan.
[edit] Ralph Heaton III
On the death of Ralph II in 1862, Ralph III (1827-10 November
1891) took over the running of Ralph Heaton & Sons. He added
eleven lever presses, made on site, retiring the last of Boulton's
screw presses in 1882. In addition to the production of coins
and blanks the firm manufactured metal parts for ammunition,
gas fittings, medals, ornaments, plumbing fittings, rolled and
strip metal, tube and wire.
In 1871 the first order for silver coinage was for Canada,
and in 1874 the first gold was struck - Burgersponds for the
new South African Republic – 837 pieces.
Following parliamentary approval in 1881 to upgrade the Royal
Mint, the firm provided ten lever presses and a cutting-out
press, effectively depriving itself of coining contracts from
the Royal Mint for some time.
Shortly before his death, Ralph III converted the family business
into a public limited liability company, passing control on
22 March 1889 to the new company named The Mint, Birmingham,
Limited. The agreement paid £110,000 to Heaton with £10,000
worth of copper. In addition £2,000 annual rent for the
Mint property would be paid, and his son, Ralph IV would be
general manager, his other sons Gerald and Walter would have
senior positions, and he, Ralph III, would remain as a director.
He died two years later.
[edit] Ralph Heaton IV
Almost immediately his son, Ralph IV, was elected Managing Director
by the board. Between 1896 and 1898 the Mint struck all of Russia's
copper coins (over 110,000,000 coins per year).
During the First World War the Mint produced strip brass and
copper tubing for munitions.
Orders for colonial coins, blanks and bar metal were a steady
source of business until, in 1912, an order for 16.8 million
bronze coins for Britain, and in 1918 and 1919, further orders
for 7.1 million pence saw the mint striking coins for the home
market. British penny coins minted by Heaton and dated 1912
can be identified by a very small upper case letter 'H' appearing
alongside the date: many of these coins were removed from circulation
by collectors during or before the decade preceding February
1971. However, also in 1912, the Mint saw its first competition
as the Kings Norton Metal Company was also contracted to supply
bronze blanks to the Royal Mint, and in 1914 struck coins for
the colonies. Kings Norton became part of Imperial Chemical
Industries (ICI) in 1926 and was reorganised as part of Imperial
Metal Industries Limited (IMI) in 1962.
Ralph IV retired in 1920. His successor was his brother in
law, W. E. Bromet. Heaton's son Ralph V joined the firm in 1922
on the commercial part of the business, eventually rising to
the position of company secretary.
[edit] Depression
In 1923 the almost monopoly position of the Mint as supplier
to foreign (non-empire) countries was lost as the Royal Mint
was given permission to supply to the world market, although
the Mint continued to supply the Royal Mint. During The Depression
profits were minute and after shareholder revolt the Mint was
taken out of the hands of the Heaton family in May 1935. From
this time the production of coins became a small part of the
overall business of non-ferrous metal sheet and tube production.
Coinage accounted for 10-20% of the business from 1940-64. World
War II again demanded quantities of brass sheet and copper tube
for ammunition and aluminium-brass cylinder linings for Rolls-Royce
aeroplane engines. Bomb damage and the effects of continuous
production for the war left the factory run-down. It was unable
to supply new minting machinery to the Royal Mint in 1948, but
did provide the necessary drawings.
[edit] Maria Theresa thaler
In 1949 the Mint produced an edition of the Maria Theresa thaler,
a silver "trade dollar" widely used in the Middle
East and previously minted by the Vienna Mint, or later, the
Rome Mint. Further mintings were in 1953, 1954 and 1955.
[edit] 1950s
By 1953, coins accounted for only 5% of the business. A major
product was copper tubing and fittings for the building industry,
supplied under the MBL trade mark. Medals, slot machine tokens
and gambling tokens were produced.
[edit] 1960s onwards
In 1965 a consortium of the Mint, the Royal Mint and IMI achieved
a growth in the export market. The Mint expanded to an adjacent
site in 1967 but a reduction I orders from the Royal mint immediately
followed, apart from a large order for 1680 tons of bronze half-pence
blanks and 466 tons of cupro-nickel 10 pence blanks were supplied
to the Royal Mint for the decimalization coins in 1968-71.
Business reorganisations saw the sale in 1975 of the copper
pipe business and a reinvestment in new coining machinery with
continuous casting techniques.
In addition to manufacturing coins, the Birmingham Mint also
produced proof medals and tokens for vending machines. They
also produced and named Long Service & Good Conduct medals
for West Midlands Fire Service.
[edit] Decline
In later years, the plant became increasingly busy with the
introduction of the Euro within the European Union; the mint
produced several million €1 and €2 coins. However,
a slump in trade and contractual agreements between them and
the Royal Mint resulted in the sale of the mint in late 2003.
The Mint was acquired by JFT Law & Co Limited who still
produce and sell commemorative coins and medals from a website.
Substantial parts of the plant and machinery were subsequently
purchased by an Indian company, Lord's Security Mint Limited.
The Pobjoy Mint purchased the newest high speed presses plus
new tooling.
Most of the complex, excluding the Icknield Street block and
the rear, retaining, wall, was demolished in April 2007. The
façade is grade II listed.
[edit] Redevelopment
After being purchased by George Wimpey, planning consent was
given for a large mixed use residential and commercial scheme.
However the project was deferred due to the downturn in the
wider economic climate, and it was later sold on in January
2007 to Junared Property Group.