The Bank of Montreal's chartered bank issues occupy a peculiar niche in Canadian numismatics — legally, they circulated as currency, but they were obligations of a private institution, not the Crown. By 1923, the Dominion of Canada had long been pressuring chartered banks to exit the note-issuing business, and the Bank Act revisions of 1944–45 would eventually formalize that exit. This $50 denomination was issued well into that twilight period, circulating alongside Dominion of Canada notes in a dual-system arrangement that confused no one who used it daily but baffles collectors trying to reconstruct the monetary plumbing of the era.
ABNC printed the bulk of Canada's chartered bank paper throughout this period, and their New York facility handled the Bank of Montreal account across multiple series. High-denomination chartered bank notes from this issue — $50 and above — saw limited commercial circulation and were used primarily for interbank settlement.
The Bank of Montreal's chartered bank issues occupy a peculiar niche in Canadian numismatics — legally, they circulated as currency, but they were obligations of a private institution, not the Crown. By 1923, the Dominion of Canada had long been pressuring chartered banks to exit the note-issuing business, and the Bank Act revisions of 1944–45 would eventually formalize that exit. This $50 denomination was issued well into that twilight period, circulating alongside Dominion of Canada notes in a dual-system arrangement that confused no one who used it daily but baffles collectors trying to reconstruct the monetary plumbing of the era.
ABNC printed the bulk of Canada's chartered bank paper throughout this period, and their New York facility handled the Bank of Montreal account across multiple series. High-denomination chartered bank notes from this issue — $50 and above — saw limited commercial circulation and were used primarily for interbank settlement.