Guest post: Nominate a scientist for the new £50 note
Originally a comment by latsot in Miscellany Room.
There’s a new £50 note being issued soon. One of those new plastic ones that spring clean out of your hand and away on the breeze if you try to fold them. Anyway, the Bank of England is accepting nominations for who should be featured on the note. It has to be a British scientist.
You know what’s going to happen here. The nominations are going to be Dawkins, Hawking, Cox (Cox has already nominated and argued for Hawking) with the more historically minded going for the likes of Crick, Darwin, of course (deserving but has already been on a note), Faraday, Halley, Higgs, Jenner, Dirac…. Well you get the idea. Deserving scientists all (although note that I didn’t say deserving of what) but obvious choices for an obvious reason.
If you feel like voting, you can pick my personal favourite, Mary Anning: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mary_Anning
Or you could choose, say,
Harriette Chick
Eva Crane
Deborah Doniach
Rosalind Franklin
Monica Grady
Helen Gwynne-Vaughan
Wendy Hall
Anita Harding
Joanne Johnson
Ada Lovelace
Elsie Widdowson
Florence Nightingale
And thousands of other people guilty of doing science while female.
I’ve only met one of those on this list (guess who and no even I’m not *that* old) and I’d love to see her on a note. Also, some of these people (including her) are alive and therefore not eligible but fuck it: a) a lot of people are marauding around on places like Twitter nominating people who are alive and b) it’s worth finding out about all the people on that list regardless, if you don’t already know about them.
But if you do one thing I instruct you to this year, vote for someone who is not an obvious suspect and preferably not a man. You don’t even have to be British, any bugger can vote. If your browser tells you you can’t… see me.
Also, as a personal favour to me, whatever you do, don’t pick Tim Berners-Lee. We…. have some history. I would hate to have to punch holes in any £50 note I inexplicably managed to get hold of. Especially not these new ones, they are quite hard to kill.
And anyway, just vote for Mary Anning. Particularly if you have ever been to the Natural History Museum in London.
I was thinking Curie?
Has to be British I think.
I think my vote would go to Ada Lovelace. Maybe because I’m a computer programmer. Also, maybe a bias towards seeing people who lived a long time ago on my folding money.
It’s a bit academic though. Nobody in the UK uses 50 quid notes.
Nightingale was on the tenner from the 70s to the 90s. I’d like to see Anna Atkins on there
Franklin.
London to a brick.
I had to look Mary Anning up, (sad that I had to!).
Now I want to vote for her!
But I’m sure they all have interesting stories.
Whoa! No. Everybody vote for Mary Anning.
We don’t all these perfectly fine Jill Steins spoiling things.
Yeah, has to be British. I know Florence Nightingale was on the tenner, in her capacity as a health reformer. That’s one of the reasons I suggested her; no reason why she couldn’t be on the new fifty as well, this time in her role as a mathematician and pie-chart-populariser.
Wasn’t Lovelace on a bill? Or am I conflating that with a stamp?