See full images - free registration
Continue with Google - no registration! or register with email

Why register? Just to keep bots out of our catalog. Your email stays private - we will never share it or send you anything uninvited. We guarantee you that!

50 Dollars

Issuer Oriental Bank Corporation
Year 1866
Type Log in to see details
Value Log in to see details
Currency Dollar (1858-date)
Composition Log in to see details
Size Log in to see details
Shape Log in to see details
Printer Log in to see details
Designer(s) Log in to see details
Engraver(s) Log in to see details
In circulation to Log in to see details
Reference(s) Log in to see details
Obverse description Engraved in classical intaglio, the note is headed INCORPORATED BY ROYAL CHARTER and centred on the Royal Arms vignette — a crowned shield supported by a lion and a unicorn — above the place name VICTORIA, with the denomination FIFTY repeated at upper left and upper right. The main text panel carries the promise to pay legend in letterpress, with Chinese script panels along both vertical margins. The printer's imprint BATHO & Co., 35, LOMBARD STREET, LONDON appears at lower centre, with SPECIMEN overprinted across the face.
Obverse lettering INCORPORATED BY ROYAL CHARTER
FIFTY
HONG KONG.
VICTORIA,
THE ORIENTAL BANK CORPORATION
Promise to pay the Bearer on demand, at their Office here, Fifty Dollars, or the equivalent in the Currency of the Island. Value received.
By order of the Court of Directors.
BATHO & Co., 35, Lombard Street, London.
MANAGER.
SPECIMEN
Reverse description Log in to see details
Reverse lettering Log in to see details
Signature(s) Log in to see details
Protection type Log in to see details
Protection description Log in to see details
Variants Log in to see details
Comments

The Oriental Bank Corporation was one of the great exchange banks of the British Empire — chartered in 1851, operating across India, Ceylon, Mauritius, and the Far East at its peak. By 1866, the year this note was printed, the bank was already navigating the aftershocks of the global credit crisis of 1866, triggered by the collapse of Overend, Gurney & Co. in May of that year. The OBC survived that immediate shock, but the strain on its colonial operations was permanent.

Batho & Co. of Lombard Street was a relatively minor security printer by the standards of the period — not Perkins Bacon, not De La Rue — which makes their work for the OBC worth noting. The bank ultimately failed in 1884, with its remaining assets absorbed during a liquidation that rendered most surviving instruments void.

YOU MAY ALSO LIKE