![]() |
ROYAL TRIBUTE: A $25 Canadian bank note from 1935.
|
With the millennium
winding down, the Bank of Canada has decided it's time to clean out its
archives.
About 8,000 bank
notes and "specimen" notes are up for grabs, including a $25 bill
from 1935, a $500 bill from the same year, and a complete set of 1954 "Devil's
Face" currency.
There is a note
bearing the likeness of Queen Elizabeth when she was Princess Elizabeth, a
note with King Edward VIII when he was the Prince of Wales, and "Banque Du
Canada" notes with all-French text.
"It's
basically a once in a life-time opportunity for collectors," said Brian
Grant Duff of Vancouver's All Nations Stamp and Coin Shop.
"It's the
first time a central bank has auctioned a portion of their holdings. When
similar auctions have happened, like the Christie's American Banknote Company
archives auction a few years ago, it's been the printers that have sold the
material, and not the banks. So it's an unprecedented auction."
A little history is
in order. The Bank of Canada started issuing paper currency in 1935, and took
over the entire paper currency market in 1944. Up to that point, individual
banks like the Bank of Montreal and the Royal Bank produced their own currency.
Just to complicate matters, the federal government produced paper currency for
the Province of Canada from 1841 to 1870 and for the
Dominion of Canada from 1870 to 1934.
The notes in the
auction are from 1935 to 1979, and each one comes with a story. The 1935 $500
bill, for example, is a "specimen" note, a type that almost never
leaves the bank's archives. (The word "specimen" is printed or
punched into the face of the note.)
"Specimen bank
notes are exceedingly rare, because they're printed as examples for banks to
use," Grant Duff explained. "Clients of the bank who are trying to
understand what a bank note should look like normally get these. They don't
normally fall into collectors' hands."
The 1935 $25 note
is the only $25 bill in Bank of Canada history (a specimen is being auctioned).
It was struck to commemorate the 25th anniversary of King George V and Queen
Mary's ascension to the throne (they're featured on the front).
The bank printed
two sets of notes in 1954, after some imaginative souls argued that you could
see a "devil's face" leering from behind Queen Elizabeth's curls.
"If you use
your imagination, it looks like a little hook nose, or a gargoyle or a demonic
face," Grant Duff said. "No one would care today, but back in 1954
there was a tremendous hue and cry about `how dare they put the devil's face in
the Queen's hair!' "
Auctioneer Charles
Moore expects about 150-200 bidders to attend the auction at the Four Seasons
Hotel in Toronto, and another 500 to place bids by mail, e-mail, the Internet
(at http://www.coinuniverse.com) or phone.
