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5 Dollars

Issuer Bank of Canada / Banque du Canada
Year 1954
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Currency Dollar (1858-date)
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Obverse description The obverse is printed in blue and black intaglio on a fine guilloche underprint, with the large word 'CANADA' across the upper centre and bilingual denomination inscriptions 'FIVE DOLLARS / CINQ DOLLARS' flanking the numeral '5'. A right-facing portrait of Queen Elizabeth II occupies the right field, rendered in fine intaglio engraving. The issuer legend 'BANK OF CANADA – BANQUE DU CANADA' appears in a banner across the lower centre, with Ottawa and the year 1954 noted below alongside the promise-to-pay clause in both English and French.
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Reverse lettering FIVE DOLLARS
5
CINQ DOLLARS
BANK OF CANADA – BANQUE DU CANADA
FIVE DOLLARS
CINQ DOLLARS
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Comments

The 1954 series is best known for the so-called "Devil's Face" controversy: in the original engraving of the Queen's portrait, shadows in her hair were read by the public as the profile of a horned demon. The outcry was genuine enough that BABN modified the hair engraving — the corrected version is sometimes called the "modified portrait" issue — making the original printing a sought-after variant despite identical catalogue references in some listings.

Coyne resigned as Bank of Canada Governor in 1961 under political pressure from the Diefenbaker government, which gives the Beattie-Coyne signature combination a certain historical weight beyond its face value.

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