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2 Dollars - George VI Purple

Issuer Government of British Honduras
Year 1947-1952
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Value 2 Dollars (2 BZD)
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Reverse description Purple print on multicolour guilloche underprint. The design is dominated by two large symmetrical oval lathe-work vignettes flanking a central rectangular panel, with intricate geometric and floral guilloche patterns filling the entire field. A small decorative motif appears at the top centre and bottom centre of the composition.
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Variants P#25a - 30.01.1947
P#25b - 01.11.1949 & 01.02.1952
Comments

British Honduras operated under a currency board arrangement tied to the British Caribbean dollar standard, and these notes were authorized under the Currency Notes Ordinance rather than through a central bank — an institutional distinction that kept monetary policy firmly in colonial hands throughout this period. The George VI series was printed in London and shipped out for local issue, a logistical arrangement that occasionally created gaps in supply during the immediate postwar years when De La Rue's production schedules were stretched across dozens of colonial territories simultaneously.

The purple coloring on the 2-dollar denomination served as the primary security differentiator within the series, a chromatic convention De La Rue applied consistently across British colonial issues of this type. Pick 25 spans a five-year issue window, so date position on any given example is worth checking against known printings.

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