Catalog
| Issuer | Commercial Bank of Fort Erie |
|---|---|
| Year | 1837 |
| Type | Standard circulation banknote |
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| Obverse description | Log in to see details |
|---|---|
| Obverse lettering | THE COMMERCIAL BANK OF FORT ERIE Promises to pay TEN SHILLINGS Currency Fort Erie Cashier |
| Reverse description | The reverse is unprinted, presenting plain cream-coloured paper with no engraved or typeset design elements. The note exhibits heavy wear with pronounced surface craquelure and creasing throughout, and a significant area of paper loss is present toward the upper right quadrant. |
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| Comments |
The Commercial Bank of Fort Erie was a short-lived Upper Canadian institution operating during the chaotic period of Free Banking that preceded any serious provincial regulatory framework. The 1837 date places this note squarely in the year of the Upper Canada Rebellion and a severe North American financial panic, during which dozens of small chartered and wildcat banks suspended specie payments. Many never resumed.
The dual denomination — dollars and shillings — reflects the genuine monetary confusion of the period, when British sterling, American dollars, and Spanish milled dollars all circulated concurrently in Upper Canada. Establishing equivalence on the face of the note was a practical necessity, not a stylistic choice.
Fort Erie's proximity to the U.S. border made cross-currency transactions routine along the Niagara frontier.