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4 Dollars / 1 Pound Bank of British North America, Brantford

Issuer Bank of British North America
Year 1853
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Value 4 Dollars
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Obverse lettering THE BANK OF BRITISH NORTH AMERICA
ONE FOUR
POUND DOLLARS
$4 £1
BRANTFORD
This Bank will pay the Bearer on demand ONE POUND Currency
BRANTFORD 1st July 1853
INCORPORATED BY ROYAL CHARTER
SPECIMEN
Reverse description The reverse is entirely blank, consistent with an unissued trial or specimen note printed on plain paper stock, bearing no design elements, inscriptions, or security features.
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The Bank of British North America was chartered in London in 1836 and operated as a British imperial institution with branches across the Canadian provinces — making it structurally distinct from the locally chartered colonial banks competing alongside it. The dual denomination of 4 Dollars / 1 Pound reflects the currency confusion endemic to mid-century Upper Canada, where sterling and Halifax currency ran parallel to American dollar reckoning, and merchants routinely needed both on the same instrument.

Perkins, Bacon & Petch had mastered the lathe-work guilloche and siderographic transfer techniques that made their plates extraordinarily difficult to counterfeit. The Brantford branch was a minor outpost serving the Grand River farming districts — high-denomination branch notes from small offices saw limited release and light return traffic, which accounts for the relative scarcity of surviving Brantford-payable examples today.

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