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20 Pounds Sterling

Issuer North of Scotland Banking Company
Year 1836
Type Standard circulation banknote
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Obverse lettering TWENTY POUNDS
THE NORTH OF SCOTLAND BANKING COMPANY
Promise to pay the Bearer on demand
TWENTY POUNDS
Sterling at their Office here.
By order of the Directors
Aberdeen
Accountant
Manager
Reverse description No reverse image provided; the reverse is presumed to bear a plain or lightly printed design consistent with early nineteenth-century Scottish provincial banknote practice.
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Comments

The North of Scotland Banking Company was established in Aberdeen in 1836 — the same year this note was issued — making early examples from this series effectively inaugural paper from a newly chartered institution. Scottish free banking was still operating under its pre-1845 framework at this point, meaning the bank could issue notes largely on its own terms before the Bank Notes (Scotland) Act imposed tighter constraints on new issuers.

Twenty-pound notes from Scottish provincial banks of this period rarely circulated in any meaningful volume. The denomination was a commercial instrument, moving between merchants and agents rather than through everyday trade. Survival rates reflect that: handled rarely, but not always carefully stored.

The bank was eventually absorbed by Clydesdale Bank in 1950 after 114 years of independent operation.

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