カタログ
| 表面の説明 | The obverse is printed in grey-green and black with red overprint elements, framed by a fine guilloche border. At the upper centre sits a royal coat of arms vignette flanked by two oval red medallions each inscribed ONE HUNDRED DOLLARS and the numeral 100, with the bank title COLONIAL BANK arched across the top and TRINIDAD along the bottom. The central text panel carries the promise-to-pay clause in copperplate script, with the denomination ONE HUNDRED DOLLARS in letterpress, the place of issue PORT OF SPAIN, and the authorization line BY ORDER OF THE COURT OF DIRECTORS OF THE COLONIAL BANK, alongside a MANAGER signature line and SPECIMEN overprint across the lower portion. |
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| 表面の銘文 | COLONIAL BANK ONE HUNDRED DOLLARS 100 We Promise to pay the Bearer on Demand the sum of ONE HUNDRED DOLLARS PORT OF SPAIN By order of the Court of Directors of the Colonial Bank. One Hundred SPECIMEN MANAGER ACCOUNT TRINIDAD |
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The Colonial Bank was a British overseas institution operating across the Caribbean, and by the 1890s its Trinidad branch at Port of Spain was handling a substantial volume of trade finance tied to the sugar and cocoa export economy. American Bank Note Company in New York was the dominant supplier of high-security commercial bank printing for the region at this period — the Colonial Bank used them consistently across its Caribbean branches, which means plate designs were sometimes shared or adapted across territories.
A $100 denomination at this date was a wholesale instrument, not retail currency. Few would have passed through ordinary commercial hands.