Before nationwide currency existed, Canada relied on a network of chartered banks that issued their own notes under federal approval. From Halifax to Victoria, each institution commissioned engraved designs that reflected regional identity — maritime commerce in Nova Scotia, agriculture and transport in Ontario, and emerging west-coast industry. These pre-Confederation and early post-Confederation notes functioned as both circulating money and corporate branding in a young and rapidly expanding country.
The American Bank Note Company of New York dominated Canadian printing through the late 19th century. ABNC’s intaglio proofs preserve the original artistic intent behind many designs that later circulated heavily as worn banknotes. Proofs from this era show the fine detail of maritime allegories, trade scenes, portrait medallions, and guilloché work — imagery chosen to signal stability, reliability and commercial ambition at a time when trust in paper money depended heavily on the issuing bank’s reputation.
These archival pieces form a direct window into Canada’s financial development: the rise of chartered banking, the spread of ABNC’s engraving style, and the transition from regional note-issuing rights to the centralized Dominion and later Bank of Canada systems. The selections below highlight proof material rather than circulated notes, offering a clean record of plates that defined Canadian paper-money aesthetics before national unification.