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The London 2012 Olympic and Paralympic Games medals
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Until 9 September 2012 Room 37 Admission free
‘And, if we thrive, promise them such rewards
As victors wear at the Olympian games’
William Shakespeare, Henry VI, Part 3 - Act II Scene iii
This display tells the story of the production of the medals for the London 2012 Games, from the mining of the
metal to the creation of the designs by David Watkins and Lin Cheung and production by the Royal Mint. This display
is part of the Cultural Olympiad and is supported by Rio Tinto. Examples of both these victory medals are shown
here publicly for the first time and are the high point of the display.
Historical context for these medals is provided by 19th- and 20th-century objects highlighting the longstanding
links between Britain and the Olympic and Paralympic movements. Britain played a crucial role in the creation of
both the modern Olympics and Paralympics. ‘Olympian Games’ first took place in the Shropshire town of Much Wenlock
in 1850. These games greatly inspired Frenchman Pierre de Coubertin, who attended the 1890 Wenlock games and
founded the modern Olympic Games in 1896. The Paralympic Games derive from games held in 1948 at Stoke Mandeville
Hospital, Buckinghamshire, for people injured in the Second World War. The mascots of the London 2012 Olympic and
Paralympic Games are named Wenlock and Mandeville in recognition of these earlier games.
This display includes a range of objects from the 19th-century Shropshire games alongside medals from the 1908 and
1948 Olympic Games held in London and the 1960 and 1984 Paralympic Games. These include the silver cup won by
Alfred William Oldfield at the National Olympian Games held in Much Wenlock in 1874, which has been lent by a
descendant of the winner. Margaret Maughan has lent the gold medal she won for archery at the games now recognised
as the first International Paralympic Games, held in Rome in 1960, and John Harris has contributed the gold medal
he won for discus at the International Paralympic Games of 1984, the last of these games to be held in England
until 2012.
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