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Voucher - 2 Shillings Hay Camp 7; Confinement Voucher

Issuer Camp Seven Bank, Internment Camp Hay
Year 1941
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Designer(s) George A. Teltscher
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Reverse description Printed in red on cream card stock; the entire field is covered with a repeating underprint of 25 merino rams, each individually numbered "7", arranged in a grid pattern. Bold central lettering overlays the vignette field.
Reverse lettering THIS NOTE IS VALID ONLY
WITHIN THE BOUNDARIES
OF
CAMP SEVEN
INTERNMENT CAMP HAY
The bank is under no obligation to honour this Note if presented by Holders outside this Camp.
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Comments

Hay Camp 7 was one of three adjacent internment camps established in the remote New South Wales outback in 1941, holding predominantly German and Austrian Jewish refugees who had been transported from Britain aboard the HMT Dunera — men interned first as enemy aliens despite many having fled Nazi persecution. The camp's internal scrip system was a practical necessity: internees were paid token wages for camp labor but could not legally hold Australian currency.

George Teltscher, himself a Dunera internee and trained graphic artist, designed the camp vouchers. That the printing was done within the camp itself, by the men it confined, is the detail that makes this piece genuinely unusual.

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