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2 1/2 Dollars

Emittent Brewer & Joske, Suva
Jahr 1871
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Nennwert 1 Dollar
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Vorderseitenbeschreibung Brown-printed note with the issuer's name 'Brewer & Joske, Suva' rendered in ornate script across the upper portion. A central vignette shows a coastal tropical scene with a sailing vessel, palm trees, and a standing figure. Two circular denomination cartouches reading '2 & 1/2 DOLLARS' are positioned at upper left and upper right, with serial number 3078 below each. The text of the promise to pay is set in a combination of copperplate script and letterpress, reading 'We Promise to pay the Bearer on Demand the Sum of Two and a half Dollars here Value rec'd Suva the 1st day of October 1871,' with 'TWO & A HALF' in bold block letters across the lower portion.
Vorderseitenlegende Brewer & Joske, Suva / We Promise to pay the Bearer on Demand the Sum of Two and a half Dollars here Value rec'd Suva the 1st day of October 1871 / TWO & A HALF / 2 & 1/2 DOLLARS / S. T. Leigh & Co Sydney
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Anmerkungen

Private banknotes issued by mercantile firms were common in Fiji before formal colonial banking arrived, and Brewer & Joske were among the handful of Suva traders willing to back their own paper. The firm operated as a general merchant and land agency — their notes functioned essentially as promissory instruments, circulating locally on the strength of the issuer's commercial reputation rather than any statutory guarantee.

S. T. Leigh & Co. of Sydney handled a considerable volume of colonial job printing across the Pacific during this period. The denomination itself — two and a half dollars — reflects Fiji's dollar-based currency system in use before British annexation in 1874 formally displaced it with sterling.

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