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1 Dollar = 5 Shillings

Issuer St. Lawrence Bank and Lumber Company
Year 1837
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Value 1 Dollar = 5 Shillings
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Obverse lettering ONE DOLLAR
ST. LAWRENCE BANK AND LUMBER COMPY
REAL ESTATE PLEDGED
ONE
FIVE SHILLINGS
ONE MASTER
Will pay or bearer on demand
Reverse description Plain unprinted.
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Comments

The St. Lawrence Bank and Lumber Company was one of dozens of short-lived Upper Canadian commercial ventures that issued scrip during the Free Banking chaos of the late 1830s. Whether it functioned as a genuine bank or primarily as a company payroll instrument for lumber camp workers is a reasonable question — the dual denomination (Dollar and Shillings) reflects the awkward monetary bilingualism of pre-Confederation Canada, where American dollars and British sterling circulated simultaneously and conversion was a daily negotiation.

Underwood, Bald, Spencer & Hufty — note the correct spelling — were among the most prolific American security printers of the period, producing notes for hundreds of issuers across the northeastern states and Canada.

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