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1 Dollar

Issuer Bank of British North America
Year 1838
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Value 1 Dollar
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Obverse description Black intaglio on white paper. The bank's heraldic crest vignette occupies the centre, flanked by script promise-to-pay text. Oval medallions at upper corners bear bilingual denomination inscriptions; the lower border carries the imprint LOWER CANADA in letterpress.
Obverse lettering BANK OF BRITISH NORTH AMERICA
ONE DOLLAR
We Promise to pay the Bearer on demand at our Bank in MONTREAL ONE DOLLAR for value received
For the Directors & Company
LOWER CANADA
UN PIASTRE
ONE DOLLAR
$1
$ONE
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Comments

The Bank of British North America was chartered by royal charter in 1836 and operated branches across the British North American colonies — an unusual structure for the period, more akin to a British joint-stock bank than a colonial issuer. This 1838 dollar note comes from the bank's earliest years of operation, before the colonial monetary system had settled into anything resembling coherence.

Perkins, Bacon & Co. in London produced the plates, as they did for a significant portion of early colonial North American paper. The firm's steel-engraving technique was chosen specifically for its anti-counterfeiting properties — a genuine concern in the 1830s colonies, where crude local forgeries circulated alongside legitimate notes with some regularity.

Pick S311 survivors from this early issue are genuinely uncommon.

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