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10 Dollars

Issuer Chartered Bank of India, Australia & China
Year 1900
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Value 10 Dollars
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Obverse lettering 10
INCORPORATED BY ROYAL CHARTER
Penang
25 APRIL 1900
THE CHARTERED BANK OF INDIA, AUSTRALIA & CHINA
Promises to pay the Bearer on Demand at its
OFFICE here TEN DOLLARS in Local Currency
for Value received.
BY ORDER OF THE COURT OF DIRECTORS
PENANG
Reverse description Uniformly printed in green intaglio, the reverse carries an elaborate guilloche medallion at centre with a latticework oval underprint inscribed "TEN". Denominational numerals appear in all four corners within ornate cartouches, and small vignettes of animals and a sailing ship punctuate the corners of the inner frame.
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Comments

The Chartered Bank of India, Australia and China occupied an unusual position in the colonial banking world — it held note-issuing rights across multiple jurisdictions simultaneously, meaning plates were often designed with flexible typography to accommodate different places of payment. A London-printed note intended for circulation in, say, Shanghai or Hong Kong carried the full authority of a British royal charter granted in 1853, which gave it legal standing that locally incorporated banks could not easily match.

Batho, Sprague & Co. handled security printing for several colonial and mercantile issuers during this period, though they are considerably less documented than contemporaries like Bradbury Wilkinson or Perkins Bacon. Their work on this series is worth noting precisely because so little of it survived — high-denomination notes in active trading ports were subject to heavy use, frequent reissuance, and deliberate destruction once recalled.

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