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4 Dollars

Uitgever Westmorland Bank of New Brunswick, Bend of Petticodiac
Jaar 1854
Type Log in om details te zien
Waarde Log in om details te zien
Valuta Log in om details te zien
Samenstelling Cotton paper
Afmetingen Log in om details te zien
Vorm Log in om details te zien
Drukker Log in om details te zien
Ontwerper(s) Log in om details te zien
Graveur(s) Log in om details te zien
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Beschrijving voorzijde Log in om details te zien
Opschrift voorzijde Log in om details te zien
Beschrijving keerzijde The reverse is largely plain, printed on unadorned paper with a circular collector or bank stamp applied in the centre-right area, bearing circular text around its perimeter. No engraved vignette or decorative guilloche work is present on this side.
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Beveiligingstype Log in om details te zien
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Varianten S2044a - signature at left: Johnson
S2044b - signature at left: McAllister
Opmerkingen

The Westmorland Bank of New Brunswick was a short-lived chartered institution operating out of the Bend of Petitcodiac — the town later renamed Moncton in 1855. A 4-dollar denomination is characteristically North American; British colonial banking culture in the Maritime provinces inherited the awkward overlap of sterling and dollar reckoning, and four-dollar notes answered a specific computational need when converting between the two systems at the common rate of £1 = $4.

The bank itself failed in 1867, and surviving notes were never redeemed at full face value. That financial collapse, combined with the low print runs typical of provincial Maritime banks, keeps genuine examples genuinely scarce.