Private Bank Issues

  PrevNext  

Lot 2885    Session 10 (7.30pm Wednesday)    Private Bank Issues

Estimate $30,000
Bid at live.noble.com.au
SOLD $41,000

THE COMMERCIAL BANK OF AUSTRALIA LIMITED, Sydney, New South Wales, one pound uniface, dated 8 Septr 1909, (date hand written), numbered No.C090712, signed A.W.Burrows for Manager and countersigned by Geo Jennings, both with ink signature, on paper, unwatermarked, floral lined frame around with Chinese script on each side, imprint of 'Sands & McDougall, Stationers, Melbourne', vignette in centre of seated female on wharf, with globe and winged caduceus, and ornamental oval tablet with '£1' lower left, on upper right and left 'ONE', states below, 'I Promise to pay the Bearer on Demand the Sum of One Pound here Value received Sydney. For the Commercial Bank of Australia Limited', with brown 'ONE POUND' across centre, brown and black on white, (Vort-Ronald, comments on bank and type p.133-5, similar unissued note illustrated for £100, Fig. 140 [p.133]). Folds and creases, two minor unobtrusive holes, rust spots on back, otherwise nearly very fine and extremely rare, this the only note this bank appearing in auctions over the last 15 years.

Ex M.R. Roberts Sale 23 Oct 1978 (lot 485) and Dr Alan Nicholson Collection, Sale 49 (lot 1560). The Commercial Bank of Australia was founded in 1866 in Melbourne and originally concentrated on small business and on farming. It was a successful bank which gradually expanded by taking over other smaller and unsuccessful banks such as the Australian and European Bank in 1879, part of Commercial Bank of South Australia in 1885, The Mercantile Bank of Sydney in 1891 and the National Bank of Tasmania in 1918. It opened branches in New Zealand in 1912. The bank was suspended in 1893 on April 5, but it was reconstructed and re-opened on May 6. The bank in 1981 merged with the Bank of New South Wales to form Westpac, making it at the time the largest bank in Australia. Notes from this bank are particularly rare. The bank was the only Australian Bank to include inscriptions in Chinese on banknotes because a prominent Chinese businessman on the first Board recognised the potential of the large minority of the overall population who were migrants from China. The text in Chinese translates as 'One Pound New Gold Mountain', (the Chinese name for Melbourne, as San Francisco had been translated into Chinese as Gold Mountain at the time of the Californian Gold Rush a few years earlier).

Estimate / sale price does not include buyer's premium (currently 22% including GST) which is added to hammer price. All bids are executed on the understanding that the Terms & Conditions of sale have been read and accepted. For information on grading and estimates please refer to the Buying at Auction advice.

Quick find

View a lot by number and sale.

Adjacent lots

  • Lot 2883  

    THE CITY OF MELBOURNE BANK LIMITED, Melbourne, one pound, dated originally 1st April 1877 and ...

    Estimate $15,000

  • Lot 2884  

    THE COLONIAL BANK OF AUSTRALASIA, Melbourne, one pound, dated 2nd January 1866, (date fully printed), ...

    Estimate $4,000

  • Lot 2885   This lot

    THE COMMERCIAL BANK OF AUSTRALIA LIMITED, Sydney, New South Wales, one pound uniface, dated 8 ...

    Estimate $30,000

  • Lot 2886  

    SYDNEY BANKING COMPANY, five pounds, Sydney, Jan'y 10, 1840, (184 printed), No. 1236, made out ...

    Estimate $20,000

  • Lot 2887  

    UNION BANK OF AUSTRALIA, one pound, issued at Melbourne but overstamped GEELONG three times, 1 ...

    Estimate $20,000