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5 Dollars

Issuer Commercial Bank of Newfoundland
Year 1888
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Reference(s) P#S114
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Obverse lettering COMMERCIAL BANK OF NEWFOUNDLAND / WE PROMISE TO PAY THE BEARER ON DEMAND / Five Dollars / FIVE / 5 / DOLLARS / Saint Johns / CASHIER / MANAGER
Reverse description Entirely engraved in green ink, the reverse presents an intricate guilloche lathe-work pattern filling the entire field, with numeral "5" counters at left and right within circular medallions. The bank title "COMMERCIAL BANK OF NEWFOUNDLAND" is set in a central rectangular panel framed by geometric engine-turned borders.
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The Commercial Bank of Newfoundland was chartered in 1857 and survived longer than most of its colonial contemporaries, but it did not survive 1894. When the bank collapsed in December of that year — along with the Union Bank of Newfoundland, in what became the worst financial crisis in the island's history — outstanding notes became worthless overnight. The 1888 date on this note means it was in circulation for up to six years before that failure, and redemption was never made whole.

The British American Bank Note Company handled the plate work, as they did for most serious Canadian and colonial issuers of the period. Notes from failed Newfoundland banks that survived the crisis did so largely by accident — tucked away, forgotten, never presented for redemption precisely because holders either didn't know or couldn't reach a paying agent.