Received the Albert Medal 'for his contribution to industrial progress in Britain'
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Received the Albert Medal 'for his contribution to industrial progress in Britain'
Received the Albert Medal 'for his distinguished services to Britain's industrial heritage'
Received the Albert Medal 'for her work in the field of international co-operation in economic development'
Received the award 'for his work in the conservation of wild life'
Received the award 'for his leadership in the design and manufacture of aircraft'
The 'Exhibition of Exhibitions' in the Great Room, commemorating the many exhibitions that the RSA had been involved with or organised, 1951
Prize of a gold medal and £500 offered 'A means of promoting the production or the economic utilization of food in Britain'. Awarded to Dr. Ronald Edgar Slade for a scheme for two systems of farming, one for grassland and the other for arable land
Prize of a gold medal and £500 offered 'A means of promoting the production or the economic utilization of food in Britain'. Awarded to Dr. Ronald Edgar Slade for a scheme for two systems of farming, one for grassland and the other for arable land
Received the silver medal for his simple system of grassland recording
Portrait has been identified as that of General Kingsley and was one of four works by Reynolds in the first British exhibition of contemporary art (1760), through the exhibition of these paintings Reynolds first became known to the public
Centenary Cup, designed by John Monteith Gates in collaboration with Don Weir, was hand fashioned of clear crystal by Steuben Glass at Corning, New York. The centenary of the Corning Glass Works, founded in 1851, was commemorated by the opening of the Corning Glass Center, dedicated to the history of art, science and industry of glassmaking. Corning Glass commissioned this commemorative cup in honour of the long relationship which has existed between the arts and industries of Britain and America