johnsallay - Other School Medals

  • Other School Medals

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Australia, The Halloran School Prize Medal. Sydney, Australia, 1824. Silver, hand engraved. Diameter 70.5mm, with ring for suspension. Engraved by Samuel Clayton (signed under the obverse banner S. Clayton Delt. et Sculpt.). Obverse: An allegorical scene of Athena, with owl at her feet, leading a schoolboy by the hand, the Temple of Fame and a church behind, with a legend on a scroll above that reads ARDUA PRIMA VIA EST; SED FIT LABOR IPSE VOLUPTAS. (At first the way is hard; but labour itself becomes a pleasure.). Reverse: engraved on eleven lines: INGENUO, MAGNAEQUE SPEI ADOLESCENTI Joanni D. Tawell, PROPTER INSIGNES IN ARTIBUS PROGRESSUS, SIGNUM HOC HONORARIUM DEDIT PRAECEPTOR EJUS, ET AMICUS, Laurentius Halloran SS.T.P. 1824. Æt. 14 (To John D. Tawell, a worthy young man of great promise, his teacher and friend Laurence Halloran, SS.T.P. Gave this award for distinguished progress in his studies 1824. At the age of 14). Very fine, with a small contemproary wooden display stand thought to be associated with the medal. Very rare, one of the earliest of pieces of Australian silver, executed by the finest silversmith in the colony at the time.

Provenance:

  • Morton & Eden, Ltd.; December 2, 2009, lot 351

The following catalogue description was provided courtesy of James Morton, of Morton & Eden:

A similar medal (awarded to William M. Campbell) was included in Noble Numismatics, Pty. Auction, Melbourne, 22-24 July 2008.  [see Noble Numismatics, 22-24 July 2008, Lot 705] The catalogue entry for the sale included a detailed footnote on Laurence Halloran's career and the information that five examples of the medal were recorded at the time - awarded to Robert Campbell in 1819, Francis Lord in 1822, Charles Driver and William Campbell in 1823, and to Henry Halloran in 1824.  The present piece, recently recognised in a UK private collection where it has remained for many years, therefore appears to be the sixth known.  The Sydney Gazette and New South Wales Advertiser of 1 July 1824, under the heading 'Sydney Grammar School', states: '.The first silver Medal was awarded by Doctor Halloran, to Master John Tawell, who, by assiduity of application, has in one year from the commencement of the study of the Latin language, qualified himself, to read Cæsar and Virgil, and to apply the rules of Syntax and Prosody, with readiness and facility.'.

Laurence Hynes Halloran (or O'Halloran), teacher, writer, inveterate litigant and bogus clergyman, was born in County Meath, Ireland in 1765.  Orphaned at a young age he was educated at Christ's Hospital and appears eventually (in 1800) to have been awarded a doctorate in divinity from King's College, Aberdeen.  However he never achieved the Anglican ordination he so craved, instead assuming it - with considerable success - for most of his life.

In 1783 as a young naval midshipman, Halloran was jailed for stabbing and killing a colleague.  Although acquitted shortly afterwards, he was later to become embroiled in a number of duels and in numerous disputes.  He married in 1784 and ran private classical schools in Exeter and Alphington (near Exeter) for some 12 years during which he achieved recognition as a skilled and accomplished educator, despite also being charged with immorality.  A 1794 silver medal from Alphington, hallmarked for the silversmiths H. And J. Sweet of Exeter, is known (see Grimshaw, M.E. Silver Medals, Badges and Trophies from Schools in the British Isles 1550-1850 (privately printed, Cambridge), p. 21).  Finely engraved with the Minerva and pupil motif, the piece very clearly provided the inspiration for the Sydney pieces by Clayton which were to come.

Forced to give up his Alphington school in 1796 through insolvency, Halloran managed to re-join the navy by posing as a chaplain and was additionally appointed as Secretary to Lord Northesk, third-in-command (after Nelson and Collingwood) at the Battle of Trafalgar.  The Trafalgar Roll confirms the presence of 'Rev. L.H. Halloran, D.D.' at the battle, as Chaplain on board Northesk's flagship Britannia.  Halloran's lengthy poem The Battle of Trafalgar, written in a classical, epic style, was published in London in 1806.  He was also invited to, and attended, Nelson's funeral, and subsequently delivered a sermon on Nelson's death.

The 'Reverend Dr.' Halloran was appointed Chaplain to H.M. Forces in the Cape, sailing to South Africa in 1807 with the added brief that he would 'receive 12 young gentlemen as pupils' (see Philip, Peter, British Residents at The Cape 1795-1819, 1981).  The position seemed promising but Halloran's behaviour, including libel, disobeying orders and pecuniary irregularities, soon led to severe disagreements with the Forces Commander General Grey.  By 1810 Halloran had been found guilty of defamatory libel, was fined heavily, and was expelled from the Colony.  Exposed as an impostor and fraud, a special Act of Parliament was required to retrospectively solemnise the numerous marriage ceremonies he had performed in South Africa without proper authority, some of which involved officers of high standing.  Back in England his colourful past was catching up with him, and after several years spent trying to rebuild his social standing Halloran was caught trying to forge accreditation for himself as a curate.  He was transported to Australia for 7 years, arriving in Sydney in June, 1819.

Sydney offered fresh opportunities.  With the aid of friends and the support of Governor Macquarie (who was later to call him 'the best and most admired instructor of youth in the Colony'), Halloran was soon able to open his 'establishment for liberal education', also known as 'Sydney Free Public Grammar School'.  He was joined by his second family and their unmarried mother (who may have been Halloran's own niece) in 1822.  She died following the birth of their twelfth child and in August 1824 he married Elizabeth Turnbull, aged 17, who was to bear him several more children.

Halloran appears by general consent to have been an inspiring teacher but he also had an obsessive sense of persecution, a weakness for indulging in litigation, a poor sense of financial management and a penchant for writing libellous tracts.  As he reeled from one crisis to the next, the school's fortunes wavered violently and it underwent several reincarnations before Halloran's death in 1831, following his temporary appointment as Sydney's Coroner.

The engraver of Halloran's medal, Samuel Clayton, had also been transported for forgery in 1816 (see Grimshaw, M.E. In Proceedings of the Silver Society, London, 1984).

John Dawning Tawell, the recipient of this example of the medal, arrived in Sydney with his mother Mary, and younger brother William, in 1823.  They were joining their father, John Tawell (Senior) and the brothers both attended Halloran's school.  The whole family returned in 1831 to London, where William died young.  John D. Tawell studied medicine in England, qualifying as a surgeon and apothecary before returning to Australia where he planned to build upon his father's business in Sydney.  He is known to have travelled to New Zealand in 1837 on behalf of an English friend but he too died at the early age of 27, following a lung complaint, in 1838.

The career of John Tawell Senior is an extraordinary one and is well-documented (see inter alia Geoff Miller's account published in The Pharmaceutical Journal, vol. 269 (2002), pp. 905-907).  While Halloran purported to be an ordained priest, Tawell feigned the piety of a devout Quaker to support his various endeavours.  But like Halloran, Tawell's lifestyle was such that the Society of Friends never felt itself in a position to admit him as a genuine, full member.

As a young man Tawell Senior was employed by a Quaker linen-draper, Janson of Whitechapel, where he seduced a young housemaid named Mary.  When she became pregnant the couple married and were forced to leave Janson's on account of their 'disorderly and immoral conduct'.  Tawell obtained a position with a firm of druggists and patent medicine wholesalers where he learned much but earned little.  He turned to the potentially lucrative but dangerous business of banknote forgery, being caught when he tried to order a replacement printing plate for £10 notes of Smiths' Uxbridge Bank.  Fortunately for Tawell the Smiths were (genuine) Quakers who disapproved of the death penalty, which was statutory for his offence.  By agreeing to plead guilty to the lesser charge of 'possession', he escaped the noose and was transported instead, arriving in Sydney aboard the Marquis of Wellington in 1815.

By dint of hard work and - like Halloran - by obtaining the support both of his friends and of Governor Macquarie, Tawell succeeded in opening the first pharmacy in Sydney on 1 March 1820.  The business prospered, expanded and boomed, inducing his family to join him (as noted above) in 1823.  In due course Tawell became a wealthy and a free man, able to travel at will between Australia and England, which he did from 1831.  After Mary became ill they settled in Southwark, where Tawell employed a young nurse named Sarah Lawrence to look after her.  He and Sarah began a relationship which produced two children while Mary died in late 1838 following the death of their elder son, John Dawning Tawell.

In 1841 Sarah Lawrence changed her surname to Hart and went to live near Slough, receiving an allowance from Tawell.  He married Eliza Cutforth, an elegant and well-respected Quaker widow who soon produced another son, but to Tawell's frustration the Society of Friends once more frowned upon the union.  A financial crisis in Australia in 1843 added to his problems which were further exacerbated by the growing liability of Sarah's maintenance.  Tawell resolved to poison her, an enterprise in which he succeeded (at the second attempt) on New Year's Day 1845, by means of prussic acid.  Following a court case which attracted enormous attention from the media and public at the time, he was publicly hanged for Sarah's murder at Aylesbury on 28 March, 1845.  Central to the case against Tawell was the fact that a newly-installed electric telegraph system was used to warn police at Paddington of his impending arrival on the train from Slough, and the trackside wires became known as 'the cords which hung John Tawell'.

For further refernce see:

Australian Dictionary of Biography, Vol 1, p.506-7 (A.G.Austin).

ANS Journal 1982, Sydney Grammar School Medal 1819-1824, by L.Carlisle, p.2-10.

Silver Medals, Badges and Trophies from Schools in the British Isles 1550-1850, by M.E.Grimshaw.

 
Protestant Gymnasium . Klagenfurt, Austria, c.1555. Gold. Diameter 26.3mm, 10.3 grams. Obverse: EGO SUM VIA VERT ET VITA (I am the true way and the life), around a half-length portrait figure of Christ, facing right, with orb in left hand. Reverse: AGNUS DEI QUI TOLIT PECCCATA MUNDI (Lamb of God who takes away the sins of the world), around the full figure of a lamb, facing left holding a banner above.

Provenance:

  • UBS; September 15-17, 2003, Sale 57, lot 2851
  • Numismatik Lanz; May 29, 2001, Sale 103, lot 712

Prizes for academic excellence were given in Europe as early as the 14th century, but in those days were useful items such as books, silver pens and monetary awards.

The first school award medals were given at gymnasiums in Austria and Germany in the third quarter of the 16th century.  These gymnasiums were essentially secondary schools (run by either Jesuit or Protestant clerics), which prepared boys for university and taught the classical languages and liberal arts.

Dr. Herbert Erlanger, who published a book in 1975 entitled the “Origin and Development of the European Prize Medal to the End of the 18th Century”, noted that the earliest dated school award medal was given in 1577 at the Nuremberg Gymnasium at Altdorf.  There are also dated examples of school medals from other German, Austrian and Swiss cities dated from the few years right after that.

This gold medal, however, which recent research by Dr. Hubert Lanz indicates was awarded around 1555 at the Protestant Gymnasium in Klagenfurt Austria (the oldest high school in Austria), is the oldest school medal that I know of and certainly one of the oldest that exists.

All of these early school award medals were struck in silver and gold in monetary sizes (this being a 3 ducat size) and so were probably acceptable in payment, but were produced in very small numbers, and were not struck according to the legally prescribed norms for coins of the period.

Award medals (both shooting and school medals) seem to have originated in the middle of the 16th century, when a silversmith in Augsburg figured out around that time that he could use a screw press to stamp out coins and medallic objects.  As a result, the labor required and therefore the economics of making these sorts of things changed dramatically and it became more practical for medals to be used as academic prizes.

For additional information, see Lanz Auction 87 (May 19, 1998) lots 504 and 505, with additional historical notes (in German).

 
Jesuit Gymnasium. Graz, Austria, 1627. Probszt 104. Gilt silver. Diameter 55.5mm, 86.6 grams. Triple thaler size medal. Obverse: FAUTORI PATRIA GRAECIV M. (From the fatherly patrons of Graz), around a cartouche with a rampant lion facing left. Reverse: DULCI EST QUONDAM MEMINISSE LABORIS MUNUS NON MUNUS PATRIA FINIS ERIT (It is sweet to remember one day things that are past.Achieving a reward of labor is not an end in itself), within a cartouche; engraved below is the recipient's name, PETER HAIMER and the date 1627 and "B".

Provenance:

  • Numismatik Lanz; November 25, 2003, Sale 118, lot 265
  • Almost certainly the Marquis Hohenkubin piece; cf. Horsky 6234
 
Gouda Latin School, 1796. Netherlands, 1796. Gilt silver. Diameter 67.1mm, 67.3 grams. Obverse: Ornate engraving of the arms of Gouda. Reverse: Inscription in 14 lines, "INGENUO OPTI-MAEQUE. SPEI. ADOLESCENTI ABRAHAMO VAN GELDER SCOLASTICO STADIO DECURSO, ET ORATIONE PUBLICE HABITA. J.A. VAN DER BURCH. J.J. SLICHER. J.R. TAKENS. V.DM. J.P. KEMPER. SCHOLAE. GAUDANAE. CURATORES. HOC. NUMISMA. RECTORE. J. VAN LAAR. EXAMINE. AESTIVO. MDCCXCVI." above a floral spray, all within a narrow ornate border.

According to Dr. Herbert J. Erlanger (Origin and Development of the European Prize Medal to the end of the XVIIIth Century, 1975, page 41), "The Latin School in Gouda, which was either organized or re-organized in 1573, commenced to give 'promotie penningen' in the XVIIth century.  They are a fairly unusual type of school prize medal for a secondary school in that they bear the name of the recipient engraved on the reverse.  The obverse uniformly has the arms of Gouuda.  The earliest known date is 1677 and the last 1833.  Of those known one was given in the XVIIth century and the rest thereafter.  Almost certainly there are more than those that could be located by Van der Meer.  Two such medals dated 1770 and 1772 are illustrated and described in the continuation of van Loon.

 
University of Leiden Stolp Prize. 1756. Continuation of Van Loon I page 366, no. 331. Erlanger pages 67-68. White metal. Diameter 68.2mm, 115 grams. Engraved by Johann Georg Holtzhey, after Frans van Mieris (signed obverse exergue line). Obverse: Fides standing near a pedestal on which a large Bible rests, guiding a youth by pointing the way to a shining temple on a hill, with the legend MONSTRAT ITER TVTVMQVE FACIT (She shows the way and makes it safe) around; below the exergue line the legend PRAEMIVM ACAD. LEIDENSIS EX LEGATO J. STOLP (Prize of Leiden University from the legacy of J. Stolp). Reverse: A woman seated among tools representative of academic pursuits (an open book, a globe, various scientific instruments, botanical examples, and an eagle), hold a telescope pointing toward the sun, with the legend AUCTOREM MANIFESTAT OPVS (The work reveals its author, i.e. God) around, and a space below for inscribing the winner's name.

Provenance:

  • Kapen & Mades

According to the book Legatum Stolpianum, a treatise on the prize published in 2006 on its 250th anniversay, Jan Stolp (1671-1753) was a wealthy academic at the university of Leiden who, upon his death, left a large bequest (the Legatum Stolpianum) to promote the study of Christian theology. A portion of this bequest was used to fund a periodic (not necessarily annual) essay contest whose specific purpose was to overcome anti-Christian tendencies in the Enlightenment. He and several other devoted thinkers were very concerned about the advance of skepticism, agnosticism and religious indifference, so this competition was oriented toward protecting and promulgating Christian faith.

The curators of the bequest met periodically to specify a question for the essay competition and essays were submitted anonymously by students, though others were also permitted to make submissions. The winner was awarded a large gold medal initially valued at 250 guilders and it was considered a matter of great personal prestige to win a Stolp Prize. While the award was not given out annually, it has continued more or less regularly to the present day, and so is considered the oldest continuously awarded prize of this nature.

Stolp devoted a great deal of energy toward the end of his life in the preparations for designing and striking the medal. As noted in the Legatum Stolpianum, "In the later addition to his testament, dated January 1752, he [Stolp] bequeathed an additional 1,000 guilders for the fabrication of a pair of dies and the initial medals. The images prepared by Francois [Frans] van Mieris symbolize both sections of the competition: the obverse Theologia Naturalis, the reverse Christiana Morum."

 
Real Accademia de Derecho Español. Mexico, 1778. Grove K-75A. Erlanger fig. 45. Silver. Diameter 58mm, 121.4 grams. Engraved by Geronimo Antonio Gil (signed G.A. GIL at lower left obverse). Obverse: CARLOS III PADRE DE LA PATRIA Y PROTECTOR DE LAS CIENCIAS (Carlos III father of the mother country and protector of the sciences) around an armored bust of Carlos III facing right, wearing the Order of the Golden Fleece and the Order of Carlos III. Reverse: VENCE Y TRIUNFA EL MAS PRUDENTE (It overcomes and triumphs over the too prudent) around a complex allegory, as described by Erlanger, showing the academy represented by the four virtues [fortitude or courage, temperence, prudence or wisdom, and justice] who form a tribunal which crowns a kneeling figure, namely the prudent man who follows the indicated path and thus arrives at the top before his competitors, who are a strong man trying to open a new path through the underbrush and the too careful man who waits too long before starting; REAL ACADEMIA DE DERECHO ESPANOL Y PUBLICO ANO DE 1778 (Royal Academy of Spanish and public law) below exergue. Reportedly one of 154 struck in silver (168 were struck in bronze and a gold example of the nearly identical K-76A was in the Heritage 2008 May Long Beach Signature World Coin Auction #3000, lot: 52254).

Provenance:

  • UBS Numismatics; January 20-22, 2009, Sale 82, lot 3669

Gil was a very prominent engraver for the Mexico City Mint and Director General of the Academia de Bellas Artes.

 
University of San Marcos "A". Lima, Peru, 1754. Betts 398. Silver. Diameter 30.5mm, 13.0 grams. Twin olive leaf ornamented edge. VF.

Provenance:

  • John J. Ford, Sale XIII; Stack's, January 16, 2006, lot 633
  • Association Numismatica Espanola; June 26, 1973, lot 1126
 
Ecole Des Beaux Arts, Lyon. France. Copper. Diameter 36.8mm, 19.1 grams. Engraved by A. Poncet (signed below the bust). Obverse: Bust of the Roman goddess Cybele (or Tyche), facing right, COVRS ANNEXES DE L'ECOLE DES BEAUX ARTS around. Reverse: Closed laurel wreath with ribbons APPLICATION, L'INDUSTRIE and BEAUX-ARTS and rampant lion shield (arms of Lyon), with LA VILLE DE LYON A (space for name) withing the wreath. Unawarded. Edge inscribed (bee edgemark) Cuivre.

Lyon was the Roman capital of Gaul and in ancient times was dedicated to the Goddess Cybele, also known as Tyche. Cybele was the Latin name of a goddess native to Phrygia in Asia Minor and known to the Greeks as Rhea. She was the wife of the Titan Cronus and mother of the Olympian gods. Cybele was a goddess of nature and fertility who was worshiped in Rome as the Great Mother. Because Cybele presided over mountains and fortresses, her crown was in the form of a city wall, and she was also known to the Romans as Mater Turrita. Cybele’s name is linked with the words crypt, cave, dome and head. The cubic black stone in Mecca may have its roots with this Neolithic Goddess. Her animal familiar was the great lion, which is one of the symbols used to this day in Lyon.

 
Mexico City, Real Academia de Derecho Espanol (Royal Academy). 1778. G.K-75b. Bronze. Diameter 58.5mm, 103.7 grams. Engraved by G.A. GIL (signed below bust). Unlisted in Betts. Choice Very Fine. One of 168 said to be struck in bronze.

Provenance:

  • John J. Ford Sale XIII; Stacks, January 16, 2006, lot 653
  • Bernard Hearn; December 6, 1974