Catalog
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| Issuer | Barclays Bank (Dominion, Colonial and Overseas) |
|---|---|
| Year | 1926 |
| Type | Standard circulation banknote |
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|---|---|
| Obverse lettering | BARCLAYS BANK DOMINION, COLONIAL AND OVERSEAS FORMERLY THE COLONIAL BANK PROMISES TO PAY THE BEARER ON DEMAND AT ITS OFFICE HERE INCORPORATED BY ROYAL CHARTER 1836 REINCORPORATED BY ACT OF PARLIAMENT 1925 FIVE DOLLARS BRIDGETOWN BARBADOS DIEU ET MON DROIT ST. VINCENT BRANCH, ST. VINCENT |
| Reverse description | The reverse is printed entirely in green, centred on the Royal Arms vignette with lion and unicorn supporters, crowned quartered shield, and motto DIEU ET MON DROIT, set within an ornate intaglio frame of guilloche lacework and foliate scrolls. Circular denomination medallions bearing the numeral 5 appear at the left and right within rosette borders. The bank's name in bold arched lettering occupies the upper portion, with incorporation legends below the arms. |
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| Comments |
Barclays Bank (Dominion, Colonial and Overseas) was itself a new entity in 1926 — the merged product of Colonial Bank, the Anglo-Egyptian Bank, and the National Bank of South Africa, consolidated under the Barclays umbrella just the year before in 1925. This note falls right at the start of that reorganization, when the new institution was still establishing uniform note-issuing standards across its scattered colonial territories.
Bradbury Wilkinson's New Malden facility was the dominant supplier to British colonial banking networks during this period, and the engraving quality reflects that industrial confidence. The Pick S101 designation places this in the specialized private commercial issues section — not a central bank instrument, and never legal tender in any strict sense.