Catalog
| Issuer | Canadian Bank of Commerce, Toronto |
|---|---|
| Year | 1893-1912 |
| Type | Log in to see details |
| Value | 50 Dollars |
| Currency | Log in to see details |
| Composition | Log in to see details |
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| Obverse description | Log in to see details |
|---|---|
| Obverse lettering | THE CANADIAN BANK OF COMMERCE ESTABLISHED 1867 TORONTO WILL PAY FIFTY DOLLARS TO BEARER ON DEMAND 50 PRESIDENT |
| Reverse description | The reverse is printed in dark brown intaglio on an uncoloured ground, with a large ornate guilloche rosette occupying the left two-thirds of the design and a boldly engraved '50' numeral interlaced at its centre. To the right, a detailed architectural vignette presents the Canadian Bank of Commerce's head office building in a three-quarter perspective, rendered with fine cross-hatching characteristic of American Bank Note Company craftsmanship. The bank name 'THE CANADIAN BANK OF COMMERCE' appears in a recessed panel within the guilloche at the left. |
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| Comments |
The Canadian Bank of Commerce was one of the dominant chartered banks operating under the Bank Act of 1871, which permitted private institutions to issue their own currency — a system that persisted until the Bank of Canada's founding in 1934. At the $50 level, notes like this one functioned almost exclusively in commercial and interbank settlement; ordinary retail transactions simply didn't require them, which kept actual street circulation low.
The American Bank Note Company's New York facilities handled engraving and printing for numerous Canadian chartered banks during this period, a practical arrangement given the superior intaglio infrastructure south of the border. ABNC's work on Canadian chartered issues is generally consistent in quality, with the deep ink impression typical of their commercial commissions.
Survivor population at this denomination is thin — the combination of high face value and the 1944–1950 redemption deadlines under federal winding-up legislation eliminated most examples before collectors took serious notice.