It was apparent not everyone among the Inuit majority was happy about the changes that Egede had brought to Greenland a quarter of a millennium earlier.
Wayne Crocker, director at Mencap Cymru, said people might have a choice of going to an alternative cafe if another in town decided to stop accepting cash.However, were a town's only theatre - or one based in a university - to go cash-free, then some more vulnerable people would no longer be able to visit.
Ron Delnevo, from the Payment Choice Alliance, said leisure centres, parking services, and catering on public transport were among the many services that may no longer accept cash."We have some heart-rending stories from families of people with disabilities, who feel that when they don't have cash accepted, it is robbing them of their self-esteem," he said."This was their money and they had the right to spend it, and they are being told their money is no good anymore. They take that as implying that they're no good anymore."
The BRC said all large retailers were committed to accepting cash in their stores.Figures published in July from banking trade body UK Finance showed the majority of young people paid for things using smartphones or watches.
Nearly three-quarters (72%) of 18 to 24-year-olds regularly used their digital wallets to make contactless payments.
But it also found the number of people who mainly used cash for day-to-day spending hit a four year high owing to the cost of living.Sound Designer, Ben Occhipinti, was inspired by a career in sound design from a young age.
He said: "We all listen to nursery rhymes and songs as we're growing up."That forms a real connection between sound, music and stories.
"That's what I love, an audience coming into a space and experiencing a live event together in one room."Being able to add the atmosphere of sound and music is really exciting."