Catalog
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| Issuer | Niagara Suspension Bridge Bank, Queenston |
|---|---|
| Year | 1841 |
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| Shape | Rectangular |
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| Reverse description | The reverse is entirely plain, printed on unadorned cream-coloured cotton paper with no vignette, text, or ornamental work, consistent with early Upper Canadian private bank note practice of the 1840s. |
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| Variants | S1902 - dated 01.03.1841 S1902 - dated 01.07.1841 |
| Comments |
The Niagara Suspension Bridge Bank was a short-lived Upper Canadian chartered institution operating out of Queenston, a village whose commercial significance had peaked decades earlier — by 1841 it was already being overshadowed by nearby Niagara Falls and Chisholm's Wharf traffic. The dual denomination printed on this note, one dollar equated to five shillings, reflects the transitional monetary arithmetic of pre-Confederation Canada, where British sterling and American decimal currency circulated simultaneously and issuers had to accommodate both.
Pick 1902 is among the rarest survivals from any Upper Canadian private bank of this period.