Pen Museum, Birmingham, Britain: How an English city changed the world (with pens)

By Keith Austin
Updated April 28 2015 - 11:09am, first published April 25 2015 - 12:15am
Birmingham's Pen Museum.
Birmingham's Pen Museum.
Birmingham's Pen Museum.
Birmingham's Pen Museum.
Birmingham's Pen Museum.
Birmingham's Pen Museum.
Birmingham's Pen Museum.
Birmingham's Pen Museum.
It's said that, in the 19th century, 75 per cent of everything written in the world was done using a Birmingham pen.

***Please archive - images may be re-used only for positive, promotional travel stories about Birmingham?s Pen Museum
It's said that, in the 19th century, 75 per cent of everything written in the world was done using a Birmingham pen. ***Please archive - images may be re-used only for positive, promotional travel stories about Birmingham?s Pen Museum
The next cool: Birmingham is Britain's second largest city. Photo: iStock
The next cool: Birmingham is Britain's second largest city. Photo: iStock

A black and white photograph pinned to a corkboard on the wall of Birmingham's Pen Museum shows one Fanny Philips sitting at a manual nib-making machine. On an average day, a woman such as Fanny would have stamped out something like 18,000 steel pen nibs – work that put Fanny at the centre of a global trade that changed the world.

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