1925 AD., Great Britain, British Empire Exhibition, Nobel Industries bronze Medal, BHM 4204.
Great Britain, British Empire Exhibition, Nobel Industries bronze Medal, engraver Percy Metcalfe(?), 1925 AD.,
Bronze Medal (36 mm / 19,37 g),
Obv.: NOBEL / INDUSTRIES / LTD // P M , allegory of an industrial worker seated on an anvil, his chin on his hands which are resting on the top of the shaft of a sledge hammer, the hammer head being on the floor. His right foot rests on the hammer head. Factory buiding behind..
Rev.: STRUCK AT / THE / BRITISH EMPIRE / EXHIBITION / 1925 // NOBEL , in 5 lines of text, below is the logo of "Nobel".
BHM#4204 .
The British Empire Exhibition was a colonial exhibition held at Wembley, Middlesex in 1924 and 1925.
It was opened by King George V on St George’s Day, 23 April. The British Empire contained 58 countries at that time, and only Gambia and Gibraltar did not take part. It cost £12 million and was the largest exhibition ever staged anywhere in the world - it attracted 27 million visitors.
Its official aim was "to stimulate trade, strengthen bonds that bind mother Country to her Sister States and Daughters, to bring into closer contact the one with each other, to enable all who owe allegiance to the British flag to meet on common ground and learn to know each other". Maxwell Ayrton was the architect for the project. The three main buildings were the palaces of Industry, Engineering and Arts. The Palace of Engineering was the world's largest reinforced concrete building. Among its exhibits was the now famous railway locomotive, LNER no. 4472 Flying Scotsman; this was joined in 1925 by GWR 4079 Pendennis Castle.
The site had a screw-driven "Neverstop" railway linking the various buildings.
Most of the exhibition halls were intended to be temporary and demolished afterwards, but at least the Palace of Engineering and the British Government Pavilion survived into the 1970s. The Empire Pool became the Wembley Arena, and at the suggestion of the chair of the exhibition committee, Scotsman Sir James Stevenson, the Empire Stadium was kept; it became Wembley Stadium, the home of Football in England until 2002 when it was demolished to be replaced by a new stadium.
The Exhibition was also the first occasion for which the British Post Office issued commemorative postage stamps. The stamps shown were issued on 23 April 1924, and a second printing, with the date changed to 1925, was issued on 9 May 1925. A List of Great Britain commemorative stamps gives further details of British commemorative postage stamps. Many other souvenirs commemorating the event were produced as well.
A grand "Pageant of Empire" was held at the Exhibition in the Empire Stadium from 21 July 1924, for which the newly-appointed Master of the King's Musick, Sir Edward Elgar, composed an "Empire March" and the music for a series of songs with words by Alfred Noyes.
The management of the exhibition asked the Imperial Studies Committee of the Royal Colonial Institute to assist them with the educational aspect of the exhibition, which resulted in a 12-volume book "The British Empire: A survey" with Hugh Gunn as the General Editor, and which was published in London in 1924.