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2 1/2 Gulden Silver voucher

Issuer Suriname
Year 1950
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Value 21/2 Guilders (21/2 Gulden) (2.50 SRG)
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Obverse lettering SURINAME ZILVERBON GROOT TWE EN EEN HALVE GULDEN UITGEGEVEN KRACHTENS LANDSVERORDENING VAN 14 APRIL 1940 (G.B. No.60) GEREGISTREERD: PARAMARIBO, 1 JULI 1950.
(Translation: Suriname Silver Voucher Two and a Half Gulden Issued under country regulation of April 14, 1940 (G.B. No.60). Registered: Paramaribo, July 1st., 1950.)
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Reverse lettering SURINAME WETTIG BETAALMIDDEL TWEE EN EEN HALVE GULDEN JOH. ENSCHEDE EN ZONEN HAARLEM
(Translation: Suriname Legal Tender Two and a Half Gulden Joh. Enschedé and Sons Haarlem)
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Suriname maintained a silver-backed voucher system well into the postwar period partly because the territory lacked its own central bank — the Centrale Bank van Suriname wasn't established until 1957. These gulden silver vouchers circulated under the authority of the colonial treasury, functioning as a practical substitute for coin in a supply-constrained economy where actual silver specie was chronically short. Enschedé in Haarlem had printed Surinamese currency material for decades by this point, and the relationship reflected a broader Dutch colonial printing monopoly rather than any competitive tender process.