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100 Pounds

发行方 Bank of New South Wales
年份 ND (1910)
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材质 Cotton paper
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正面铭文 Bank of New South Wales
I Promise to pay the Bearer at SYDNEY on demand One Hundred Pounds Sterling
Dated the day of
For the Bank of New South Wales
Manager
One Hundred
背面描述 Plain unprinted paper ground bearing five intricate lathe-work guilloche medallions: one large central oval and four circular corner medallions, each with fine engine-turned geometric patterns. No text or vignettes appear on the reverse.
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The Bank of New South Wales was the oldest trading bank in Australia, established in 1817, and by 1910 its London-printed notes occupied the upper tier of private colonial and post-Federation banking. Chamier, Gouppy & East — a short-lived successor identity to the better-known Skipper & East firm — handled security printing for several colonial banks during this transitional period, and their work for NSW is among the rarer surviving examples of that house's output.

A £100 denomination was a working instrument for pastoral and mercantile transactions, not a curiosity. Few circulated long enough to survive in collectable condition, and the attrition rate on high-value private bank notes of this period was severe — most were redeemed and pulped.