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10 Dollars

Emittent Royal Bank of Canada
Jahr 1935
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Form Rectangular
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Vorderseitenbeschreibung Black intaglio print on white paper with orange underprint. Two oval portrait vignettes flank the centre — a male figure at left and another at right — framing the Royal Bank of Canada coat of arms at centre, surmounted by a crown. The bank title 'THE ROYAL BANK OF CANADA' arches across the top, with the legend 'WILL PAY TO BEARER ON DEMAND' below it, and 'TEN DOLLARS' at the lower centre; red serial numbers and prefix letter 'D' appear at upper left and right. The date 'JAN. 2nd 1935' and 'MONTREAL' are inscribed at the bottom centre, flanked by two facsimile signatures.
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Unterschrift(en) J.E. Dobson and Morris Wilson
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Anmerkungen

The Royal Bank's 1935 series arrived at an awkward moment — the Bank of Canada had just been established that same year and immediately began absorbing chartered bank circulation. The Royal Bank and other private issuers retained the legal right to circulate their own notes but faced a structured phase-out, with a prohibitive tax on chartered bank notes below $5 eventually squeezing the smaller denominations out entirely. The $10 denomination survived longer, giving notes like this one a genuine if brief period of active use.

Morris Wilson was president of the Royal Bank at the time of signing. The British American Bank Note Company in Ottawa had been the Royal Bank's primary printer for decades by this point, a relationship that shows in the consistent execution across the 1935 series.