Fiji's wartime shilling notes of 1942 were a direct response to the acute small-denomination coin shortage that struck the Pacific islands after Japanese advances disrupted normal shipping and supply routes. The Government of Fiji issued these fractional currency notes under emergency authority rather than through the normal banking structure — an unusual arrangement that bypassed the Fiji Currency Board entirely.
The "Colony of Fiji" undertext functions as a security underprint, a simple measure against counterfeiting at a time when sophisticated printing resources were unavailable locally. Pick 49 is part of a broader fractional series that included 6 pence and 2 shilling values, all sharing the same wartime urgency and the same makeshift character.
Fiji's wartime shilling notes of 1942 were a direct response to the acute small-denomination coin shortage that struck the Pacific islands after Japanese advances disrupted normal shipping and supply routes. The Government of Fiji issued these fractional currency notes under emergency authority rather than through the normal banking structure — an unusual arrangement that bypassed the Fiji Currency Board entirely.
The "Colony of Fiji" undertext functions as a security underprint, a simple measure against counterfeiting at a time when sophisticated printing resources were unavailable locally. Pick 49 is part of a broader fractional series that included 6 pence and 2 shilling values, all sharing the same wartime urgency and the same makeshift character.