The Wyon family was an English family of traditional die-engravers and medallists, many of whom went on to work in prominent roles at the Royal Mint or as engravers in a family die business.[1] Starting from Peter George (II) Wyon who migrated to England from Cologne, Germany many subsequent descendants of have made notable contribution to British numismatics. Over the course of the 19th-century two members of the family became Chief Engraver at the Royal Mint with many more involved in coin design.[2][3]
- Peter George (II) Wyon
- George Wyon (d.1796)
- Thomas Wyon the elder (1767–1830)
- Thomas Wyon (1792–1817)
- Benjamin Wyon (1802–1858)
- Alfred Benjamin Wyon (1837-1884)
- Joseph Shepherd Wyon (1836-1873)
- Allan Wyon (1843–1907) -M- Harriet Gairdner
- Olive Wyon (1881–1966)
- Allan G. Wyon 1882–1962) -M- Eileen May Trench
- 1 Daughter
- Guy Alfred Wyon (1883–1924), pathologist
- Edward William Wyon (1811–1885) -M- Elizabeth Smyth
- Edward Alexander Wyon (1842–1872)
- William Wyon (1795–1851)
- Leonard Charles Wyon (1826–1891)
- Peter Wyon (1797–1822)
- George Wyon (1771) -M- Elizabeth Phillips
- James Wyon (1804–1868)
- George William Wyon (1836–1862)
- Henry Wyon (1834–1856)
- John George Wyon (1806)
- Edward Wyon(1857-1906)
- James Wyon (1804–1868)
- Thomas Wyon the elder (1767–1830)
- George Wyon (d.1796)
References
edit- ^ "J.S. & A.B. Wyon, Engravers, London, England". Museums Victoria Collections. Retrieved 6 May 2017.
- ^ "Wyon, Thomas (1792-1817)". Dictionary of National Biography. London: Smith, Elder & Co. 1885–1900.
- ^ "Reverend Allan Gairdner Wyon". sculpture.gla.ac.uk. Retrieved 6 May 2017.