Catálogo
| Emissor | Central Bank of New-Brunswick, Fredericton |
|---|---|
| Ano | 1852-1853 |
| Tipo | Standard circulation banknote |
| Valor | Inicie sessão para ver os detalhes |
| Moeda | Inicie sessão para ver os detalhes |
| Composição | Inicie sessão para ver os detalhes |
| Dimensões | Inicie sessão para ver os detalhes |
| Formato | Inicie sessão para ver os detalhes |
| Impressora | Inicie sessão para ver os detalhes |
| Designer(s) | Inicie sessão para ver os detalhes |
| Gravador(es) | Inicie sessão para ver os detalhes |
| Em circulação até | Inicie sessão para ver os detalhes |
| Referência(s) | Inicie sessão para ver os detalhes |
| Descrição do anverso | Blue-black intaglio print on cream paper. Left vignette shows a classical female figure seated with a sheaf and sailing vessel; centre vignette bears the New Brunswick royal arms with lion and unicorn supporters under a crown. Denomination numeral "1" appears in ornate counters at each corner, with issuer name in bold letterpress across the centre field. |
|---|---|
| Legenda do anverso | Inicie sessão para ver os detalhes |
| Descrição do reverso | Printed in red-orange on cream paper, the reverse consists entirely of an elaborate lathe-work guilloche pattern. Four large circular rosettes occupy the corners, flanked by a horizontal band of interlocking oval engine-turned motifs across the centre, with a smaller central medallion above and below. |
| Legenda do reverso | Inicie sessão para ver os detalhes |
| Assinatura(s) | Inicie sessão para ver os detalhes |
| Tipo de proteção | Inicie sessão para ver os detalhes |
| Descrição da proteção | Inicie sessão para ver os detalhes |
| Variantes | Inicie sessão para ver os detalhes |
| Comentários |
The Central Bank of New Brunswick was a short-lived institution, chartered in 1834 and wound up by the late 1860s after chronic difficulties maintaining public confidence and adequate specie reserves. By the early 1850s, when this note was produced, the New Brunswick colonial banking environment was crowded and competitive, with several chartered banks issuing their own notes in a loose system that relied heavily on reputation rather than regulatory backstop.
Rawdon, Wright, Hatch & Co. was among the most accomplished security printers in North America at this date — the same firm, shortly reconfigured, would become the American Bank Note Company in 1858. Their lathe-work guilloche patterns were considered essentially impossible to replicate by hand engraving, which made them the preferred deterrent against the substantial counterfeiting problem colonial Canadian currency faced throughout this period.
The S-prefix in the Pick reference indicates this is catalogued as a private bank issue rather than a central government emission — technically accurate given New Brunswick's colonial status at the time of printing, fifteen years before Confederation.