Catalog
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| Issuer | Bank of New Zealand |
|---|---|
| Year | 1914-1927 |
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| Size | 201 × 131 mm |
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| Obverse description | Vignette at upper left with two Māori figures, flanked by a pair of kiwi birds at lower left amid palm trees with a volcanic peak in the background. A large denomination underprint occupies the centre of the note, with the promise-to-pay inscription and bank title arranged across the face in letterpress. The overall design is executed in a traditional intaglio style characteristic of Bradbury Wilkinson's early twentieth-century colonial issues. |
|---|---|
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| Reverse description | The reverse is printed entirely in orange on plain paper, dominated by a large bold numeral '50' rendered in elaborate guilloche lathe-work forming the central vignette, with the denomination repeated in micro-text bands running horizontally across the note. Ornate diamond-shaped medallions bearing the numeral '50' anchor each end of the horizontal guilloche band. The inscription 'No 3 ISSUE.' appears below the central vignette, and a perforated 'CANCELLED' overprint is applied at lower left. |
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| Comments |
The Bank of New Zealand was a private commercial institution at the time of this issue — New Zealand had no central bank until the Reserve Bank was established in 1934. The BNZ held a dominant position in the colonial and early dominion banking system, and its higher-denomination notes like this one functioned almost entirely in interbank settlement and commercial trade, not retail circulation. A fifty-pound note passing through ordinary hands in 1920s New Zealand would have been genuinely unusual.
Bradbury Wilkinson's security printing for Southern Hemisphere issuers during this period is generally of high technical quality, and BNZ specimens from this series do appear in proof archives. Circulated survivors at this denomination are rare — attrition through redemption and destruction was high once the Reserve Bank assumed note-issuing authority.