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It’s 60 years since American Express UK launched its £ cards – we look back …. and reveal C F Frost

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You probably haven’t given much thought to the history of the plastic in your wallet, but after American Express told us that today was 60 years since it launched its first Sterling card in the UK we thought it was worth taking a trip down memory lane.

American Express wasn’t always a financial services company. Founded in 1850 in Buffalo, New York, American Express was initially a freight forwarding company (hence the ‘Express’).

Around the turn of the century (the 20th century, that is), Amex diversified and started offering money orders, travellers cheques and foreign currency exchange. It opened its first UK office in London’s 3 Waterloo Place in 1896. The first European office of any sort was in Paris, opening in 1895.

60 years today since American Express UK launched
Image from the Smithsonian National Postal Museum

According to Amex:

“From 1914 – 1918 during World War I, American Express helped 150,000 stranded travellers in Europe by cashing Travellers Cheques and booking passage to America, at a time when customers had been unable to withdraw funds from their banks.”

Following the US nationalisation of express industry after the first World War in 1918, American Express focused wholly on its banking and travel services.

The first American Express Card was launched in 1958. It was a paper card in purple (photo above); embossed plastic cards followed in 1959. In 1969 the colour of the card changed to “money green” to match the colour of the US dollar.

It was another five years before the company would introduce its first pound sterling American Express Card (technically a charge card) in 1963.

Upon its launch, the BBC noted that:

“There will be an annual fee of £3 12s, but supplementary cards can be obtained at half price for immediate family members. Companies can also apply for cards and issue them to members of staff.”

Adjusted for inflation, £3 12s is around £90; average weekly earnings in 1963 were around £10 according to the Office for National Statistics. The BBC continues:

“American Express Vice President Maxwell Elliot said the people most likely to take up the new card would be managers and sales executives earning £2,000 a year or more.”

Whilst often synonymous with credit and charge cards, American Express was not the first provider in the UK; that was Finders Services, which launched in 1951 and merged with Credit Card Services to form Diners Club UK in 1962.

It was almost 20 years until Amex launched the Gold Card in 1981, with the Platinum Card following 10 years later in 1991. The card designs haven’t changed much in that time.

Membership Rewards, then known as Membership Miles, were introduced in 1993 and the first ‘proper’ American Express credit card was launched in 1995.

In 2000, American Express partnered with British Airways to launch the he British Airways American Express cards.

The rest, as they say, is history.

PS. Things you never knew you never knew ……

And finally …..

“Charles F. Frost was an Oglivy & Mather advertising executive who worked on the American Express account in the 1960s, and his name was kept alive by being featured on credit cards displayed in ads for American Express.”

Thanks to Adweek for this nugget.


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Comments (57)

This article is closed to new comments. Feel free to ask your question in the HfP forums.

  • mark2 says:

    I am sure that I had a gold card thr Lloyds Bank in the late 70s. It came with an overdraft limit of 10,000 at 1% above base rate with a substantial annual fee.
    Perhaps this was only available through Lloyds.

    • Alex says:

      My father had the same with his Lloyds account. Always remember the monthly statement envelope with the 2nd carbon copies of purchases from the zip-zap machine.

  • flyforfun says:

    I always have a soft spot for Amex. When my parents did a round the world trip in the 80s, we’d receive the carbon copy duplicates of places they’d been along with the statement. It seemed amazing to get these slips from all over the world!

    Then when I moved to the UK, for what was meant to be a 1 yr working holiday which turned into a 30+ yr one, Amex was able to swap my card for a UK one with out me prompting. It was just part of the service as they got to know me regularly going in to pay my monthly bill at their Haymarket site. UK banks didn’t even give me a proper debit card until a year or two down the track. Obviously before the days of the internet and the multitude of payment cards around now.

  • mark2 says:

    American express also used to have travel agents offices in some large towns.

  • FatherOfFour says:

    If Membership Rewards/Miles weren’t introduced until 1993, what were the key benefits of the gold and platinum cards until that point? I was just a kid back then, so don’t know what the credit/charge card market was like?

    • Rob says:

      They were far higher status products than they are now. Simply having one gave you the cache that only a Centurion card can offer today.

      • Jonathan says:

        Do we know if it was the same for other markets, notably the U.S. at all ?

        If we assume that MR points (or miles) weren’t available for earning through everyday spend until 1993 (like the UK market) what’s the advantage it had having one of their cards in that market ?
        Amex is far stronger in the U.S. than any other market, and loads of people have their cards.

        Did the U.S. cards give or show far higher status products like they did so here in the UK ?

  • Tony says:

    They should reissue those retro designs. I’d get one in a heart beat.

    • Jonathan says:

      One like !

      My favourite card design is the Iconic Green Charge Card, they should give that design to the free MR card (ARCC) now that IGCC is no longer available to new customers

  • Bob says:

    “In 2000, American Express partnered with British Airways to launch the he British Airways American Express cards.”

    I am surprised BA has waited 2000.
    I believe you fo course.

    It is in 1998 when the Air France one was launched In France.

  • Lady London says:

    I had loads of their Travellers’ Checks for years. I used them as a kind of current account. Convenient, as I worked in a business travel agency right next to Amex at 6 Haymarket.

    They were accepted everywhere. You could even take them into some banks in Europe and they would cash them. They looked like the original purple card shown except they were Amex Green on white.

  • PH says:

    I was wondering about C F Frost just this week while staring at an Amex ad on the tube..

This article is closed to new comments. Feel free to ask your question in the HfP forums.

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