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PRIVACY
Retail & Consumer

Celebrated city firm came from humble beginnings

Medal and uniform business Toye & Co has been passed from father to son for more than three centuries. Now, for the first time, a woman is in charge. Zoe Chamberlain reports

Joe Cunningham, a Toye & Co Masonic Mounter, holds up the M.B.E Die.

You can almost plot the history of the º£½ÇÊÓÆµ by the work carried out over hundreds of years by Toye & Co.

Since 1685, the company’s expert weavers, goldsmiths, enamellers and embroiders have designed and manufactured medals, sashes, uniforms and badges for governments, companies and societies.

The factories, based in Birmingham’s Jewellery Quarter and in Bedworth, Warwickshire, even make the FA Cup and the insignia for the Royal family.

“One of the biggest things Toye & Co used to do were the trade union banners in London,” explains chief executive Fiona Toye.

“We still make some but they’ve pretty much disappeared now.

“For the Queen’s coronation, cypher banners were made for each premier member of the royal family.

“These great embroidered banners have recently been at Westminster Abbey. One was made for Queen Mary but it was not used because she died before the coronation.”

The company was supportive of votes for women, especially as many of the staff were female at that time.