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100 Francs

Issuer Banque de la Guyane
Year 1942-1945
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Printer E. A. Wright Bank Note Company, Philadelphia, United States (1872-1964)
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Reverse description Dark green intaglio printing on a light salmon-red guilloche underprint. The central design comprises three interlocking medallions: the flanking two bear the numeral '100' within fine lathe-work rosettes, while the central medallion carries the 'BG' monogram of the Banque de la Guyane enclosed in a circular guilloche frame with ornamental scrollwork. The denomination 'CENT FRANCS' appears in a bold panel below, with the anti-counterfeiting legal warning in small text beneath it and the printer's imprint at the very bottom.
Reverse lettering BANQUE DE LA GUYANE 100 BG 100 CENT FRANCS L'ARTICLE 139 DU CODE PÉNAL PUNIT DES TRAVAUX FORCÉS À PERPÉTUITÉ LE CONTREFACTEUR E. A. WRIGHT BANK NOTE CO., PHILA.
(Translation: Bank of Guiana Hundred Francs Article 139 of the Penal Code punishes the counterfeiter with forced labor in perpetuity.)
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Comments

The Banque de la Guyane's wartime production shift to Philadelphia was a direct consequence of the Fall of France in 1940. French Guiana initially aligned with Vichy, then rallied to the Free French in March 1943 — a political reversal that left the territory's currency supply dependent on American printing capacity rather than the usual metropolitan French sources.

E. A. Wright was primarily a commercial engraving and stationery firm, not a specialist security printer. Its involvement here reflects genuine wartime scarcity of alternatives on the Allied side, not a considered procurement decision.

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