Collection PL

About

New Zealand’s paper money developed under a private-bank system long before monetary centralization. Through the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries, trading banks operating under statute—most prominently the Bank of New Zealand—placed London-engraved notes into circulation, redeemable on demand and trusted across a geographically dispersed, export-driven economy. Design and production standards were aligned with British practice, ensuring that New Zealand notes would be accepted both domestically and within imperial settlement networks.

The private-bank sequence represented here was engraved and printed by Bradbury, Wilkinson & Co., London, whose disciplined approach to denomination hierarchy, color coding, and serial logic defined the visual and functional grammar of Bank of New Zealand issues. The lineage progresses from the early £1 Green through the £5 Orange and £10 Brown, culminating in the seldom-seen £20 Blue—the highest practical denomination issued by New Zealand’s private banks prior to 1934.

The £20 Blue audit-range specimen (Pick S194s) represents the apex of this system. Executed in subdued blue-slate tones reserved for the highest settlement tier, it carries dual live serials rather than a zero-serial format, identifying it as an internal audit and approval piece retained by Bradbury Wilkinson during plate alignment, tint calibration, and numbering verification. Such audit-range specimens were never intended for public or institutional circulation and were almost universally destroyed once approval was complete.

Wartime production introduces a second layer of complexity. The £5 Red-Rose specimen (Pick S227s), printed during the 1916–1920 period, reflects material constraints and pigment shifts imposed by the First World War while preserving its position within the established BNZ color hierarchy. This specimen retains dual live serial prefixes and carries contemporary printer annotations, confirming its role as an internal audit and control document rather than a display specimen. Its survival provides rare evidence of how Bradbury Wilkinson managed quality control under wartime conditions.

Together, these specimens document more than denomination progression. They preserve the internal mechanics of private-bank note production: audit-range serial blocks, multi-serial approval formats, pencilled press annotations, and cancellation strategies designed to prevent accidental circulation. These features are not peripheral details—they are the operational language of the system.

Monetary centralization arrived with the establishment of the Reserve Bank of New Zealand in 1934, ending private note issue and introducing a unified national currency. The Bank of New Zealand specimens shown here therefore represent the final, fully matured phase of New Zealand’s private-bank era. Read together, they trace a complete arc: from early commercial trust-building, through wartime adaptation, to the threshold of central banking.

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New Zealand 1981 1 Dollar H.R. Hardie Signature vertical perforated SPECIMEN on both sides with horizontal red overprint, no punch holes or oval stamp, Serial AAA000000, Pick 169as, PMG 65 EPQ Gem Uncirculated.

New Zealand 1981 — 1 Dollar (Pick 169as, H.R. Hardie Signature, Vertical Perforated SPECIMEN, Serial AAA000000, PMG 65 EPQ Gem Uncirculated)

The 1981 one-dollar specimen represents the later phase of New Zealand’s second decimal design series, issued during the ND (1981–1985) period under the signature of H.R. Hardie as Chief Cashier. While Hardie’s name also appears on the earlier ND (1977–1981) issues, this note belongs to the subsequent design revision distinguished by the updated portrait of Queen Elizabeth II, reflecting a more mature likeness compared to the earlier youthful depiction. ... Read more →

New ZealandSpecimen with Vertical Perforations and Red Overprint19811 DollarPMG 65 EPQ Gem Uncirculated SpecimenVertical Perforated SpecimenPerforated SPECIMENVertical perforation both sidesRed OverprintHorizontal SPECIMEN overprintNo Punch HoleNo Oval Stamp1 DollarQueen Elizabeth II portrait revisedCaptain James Cook watermarkThomas De La RueTDLRHardie SignatureH.R. HardieRevised Hardie signature typeSpecimen perforation formatDecimal SeriesReserve Bank of New ZealandSecond design typeNew Zealand currency evolutionHistoryNew Zealand198119851981-1985AAA000000Pick 169asPick 169aPMG 65 EPQGem UncirculatedMuseum Grade
Held
New Zealand 1981 1 Dollar issued note H.R. Hardie signature revised Queen Elizabeth II portrait serial AAA000662 Pick 169a PMG 67 EPQ Superb Gem Uncirculated.

New Zealand 1981 — 1 Dollar (Pick 169a, H.R. Hardie Signature, Serial AAA000662, PMG 67 EPQ Superb Gem Uncirculated)

The 1981 one-dollar note represents the revised design phase of New Zealand’s decimal currency series, issued during the ND (1981–1985) period under the signature of H.R. Hardie as Chief Cashier. Although Hardie’s name also appears on the earlier ND (1977–1981) issues, this note belongs to the later redesign distinguished by the updated portrait of Queen Elizabeth II, presenting a more mature likeness and clearly separating it from the earlier, younger portrait type of the same signatory period. ... Read more →

New ZealandIssued Note19811 DollarPMG 67 EPQ Superb Gem Uncirculated Issued Note1 DollarQueen Elizabeth II portrait revisedCaptain James Cook watermarkDecimal currency noteOriginal issueSerial number noteBradbury WilkinsonBWCHardie SignatureH.R. HardieRevised Hardie signature typeStandard circulation productionDecimal SeriesReserve Bank of New ZealandSecond design typeNew Zealand currency evolutionHistoryNew Zealand198119851981-1985AAA000662Pick 169aPMG 67 EPQSuperb Gem UncirculatedTop PopMuseum Grade
Held
New Zealand 1981 1 Dollar printer annotation specimen with star serial AA000000*, handwritten not approved marking, single punch hole, no overprint or oval stamp, Pick 169as, PMG 65 EPQ Gem Uncirculated.

New Zealand 1981 — 1 Dollar (Pick 169as, H.R. Hardie Signature, Star Serial AA000000*, Printer’s Annotation, PMG 65 EPQ Gem Uncirculated)

The 1981 one-dollar specimen represents an exceptional and highly specialized production-stage piece from New Zealand’s decimal currency series, issued during the ND (1981–1985) period under the signature of H.R. Hardie as Chief Cashier. This note belongs to the later Hardie design featuring the revised, more mature portrait of Queen Elizabeth II, clearly distinguishing it from the earlier ND (1977–1981) issues bearing the same signatory. ... Read more →

New ZealandPrinter Annotation Specimen with Punch Hole19811 DollarPMG 65 EPQ Gem Uncirculated SpecimenPrinter annotation specimenPrinter’s annotationsHandwritten not approvedStar serialReplacement style serialSingle Punch HolePunch CancelledNo OverprintNo Oval Stamp1 DollarQueen Elizabeth II portrait revisedCaptain James Cook watermarkBradbury WilkinsonBWCHardie SignatureH.R. HardieProduction control stagePrinter evaluation pieceDecimal SeriesReserve Bank of New ZealandSecond design typeNew Zealand currency evolutionHistoryNew Zealand198119851981-1985AA000000*Pick 169asPick 169aPMG 65 EPQGem UncirculatedMuseum Grade
Held
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