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25 Cents 1933, Canada

in Krause book Number: 11с
Years of issue: 1933
Edition:
Signatures: Comptroller of currency: Mr. C.E. Campbell, Deputy Minister of Finance: Mr. W.C. Clark (in office from 1933 till 1952)
Serie: Fractional Issues
Specimen of: 02.07.1923
Material: Cotton fiber
Size (mm): 113 х 61
Printer: Canadian Bank Note Company Limited, Ottawa

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25 Cents 1933

Description

Watermark:

Avers:

25 Cents 1933

Britain (UK allegory) with trident.

Denomination are repeated 5 times.

These notes were printed with the signature of the Deputy Minister of Finance (W.C. Clark) on the lower left side of the face.

Once the notes were received by the Finance Department the C.E. Campbell signature and the seal were added to the notes.

In this version the text "AUTHORIZED BY R.S.C. CAP. 31." has been deleted from above the Comptroller signature box.

The Check Letter has been removed from the serial number to the bottom left corner next to the large "25" and the Group Number is a suffix to the Series Letter which is located to the right of the seal on the right side of the vignette.

Revers:

25 Cents 1933

On patterned panel stylized flower.

Denominations on the right and left sides of it.

Comments:

Second Issue.

"Shinplasters" - Canada's Beloved 25-Cent Notes.

At the time of the American Civil War, U.S. silver coin became depreciated by 5 percent relative to gold. The situation caused American silver, mostly of the 25-cent and 50-cent denominations, to pour into Canada, where it was still received at full face value. Banks and post offices would not accept these coins, so retailers sold them at a discount to brokers, who in turn derived their livelihoods by selling the depreciated silver back to manufacturers and buyers of grain and cattle. Thus the cycle repeated and the "American silver nuisance" resulted in hardship to farmers, merchants and factory workers who had no choice but to accept their losses. The government also suffered because the $1 and $2 Province of Canada notes, issued by the Dominion government after Confederation, were being crowded out of circulation.

Sir Francis Hincks, minister of Finance in 1870, devised a three-pronged attack on the problem. The government would buy up the American silver at a discount progressing from 5 percent to 6 percent and export it, and then peg its legal value at an artificially low 80% on the dollar to ensure against its return to the country. To take its place, the first silver coins for the Dominion of Canada were ordered from the Royal Mint in London. Finally as a temporary measure, 25-cent fractional notes were to be printed and issued to provide change while the new coinage was being prepared.

The banks were opposed to the introduction of paper "shinplasters", but the fact that they were redeemable in gold when presented in quantity went a long way toward making the fractional notes acceptable.

The second issue was released in 1900 and were redesigned to feature a seated Britannia figure with trident and shield. Due to a loss of records covering the period from 1914 to 1921, the total number of 1900 25-cent notes issued is unavailable. However, of the remaining periods, over 5 million notes were issued.

Hincks' manoeuvres were eminently successful. Enough American silver was repatriated to New York to saturate the markets there, and the remainder was shipped to England as bullion. There was one unexpected outcome, however. Far from being a temporary issue as planned, the fractional notes became popular with the public and persisted in circulation for the next 65 years.

Many attribute the expression "shinplaster" to the use of fractional U.S. notes by soldiers of the Revolutionary War period to prevent their boots from chafing. The term was first used in Canada with reference to the merchants' scrip which appeared in abundance from 1837 to 1838. Subsequently it came to be applied to the 25-cent Dominion of Canada notes from the time of their first appearance in 1870.