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Australian ten-shilling note

The 10/- banknote was first issued on 1 May 1913 as a blue banknote payable in gold. It was equal to a half sovereign gold coin. The sizes varied but the design was the same for the following issues: 1913–1914 issue was 194×83mm, 1915–1923 197×88 mm, 1923–1933 180×78mm. This issue was payable in gold but subsequent issues were legal tender.

The 1913 note was the world's first officially issued ten-shilling note. The first note, serial number M000001, was printed by Judith Denman, five-year-old daughter of the Governor-General of Australia, Lord Denman.

The last banknote issue had a print of 557,548,000 banknotes.

The ten-shilling note was equivalent to one dollar upon decimalisation in 1966.

Signature combinations

James Collins and George Allen (1913, 1915)<br>John Cerutty and James Collins (1918)<br>Denison Miller and James Collins (1923)<br>Kell and James Collins (1926)<br>Kell and James Heathershaw (1927)<br>Ernest Riddle and James Heathershaw (1928)<br>Ernest Riddle and Harry Sheehan (1933, 1934, 1936)<br>Harry Sheehan and Stuart McFarlane (1939)<br>Hugh Armitage and Stuart McFarlane (1942)<br>H.C. Coombs and George Watt (1949)<br>H.C. Coombs and Roland Wilson (1952, 1954, 1961)

See also

References

External links