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£50 Pound Banknote |
| Issued | Signatories | Serial Numbers |
| 1914 - 1917 | Collins/Allen | Y 000001 to Y 083845 |
| 1918 - 1945 | Cerutty/Collins | Prefix of Y - Small numbers Y 083846 to Y 176000 |
| 1918 - 1945 | Cerutty/Collins | Suffix of Y - Bold numbers 176001 Y to 379500 Y |
| 1918 - 1945 | Cerutty/Collins | Prefix of Y - Medium numbers Y 379501 to Y 608000 |
| 1939 | Armitage/Macfarlane | Specimen |
| 1950 | Coombs/Wilson | Specimen |
Approximately 608,000 fifty pound notes were released in the entire issue period between 1914 and 1945
The first signature combination
The design on the back of the fifty pound notes depicts a flock of sheep at Bungaree in South Australia.
The same picture was used for the back of the thousand pound note.
James Richard Collins and George Thomas Allen signed the first Fifty-pound notes issued in June 1914.
The serial numbers were small seriffed with an Y prefix and printed in dark blue.
They were first delivered by the printers on March 27 1914. Only two specimens of the 83,845 printed with this signature combination
are known to have survived. They are cancelled specimens in the collections of the Art Gallery of South Australia [Y037585] and the
Mitchell library in New South Wales [Y 019632].
The second signature combination
The second signature combination was Charles John Cerutty and James Richard Collins. The notes, which were similar to the first design,
had black serial numbers with an Y prefix range from Y083846 to Y176000 and the first delivery of notes was made on February 26 1920.
The third signature combination
In 1924 a change occurred with the serial numbers becoming bold with an Y suffix. These were numbered from 176001 to 379500, and the notes
delivered on March 17 1924.
The fourth signature combination
The final issue of £50 notes was made on June 3 1940 with serial numbers Y379501 to 608000. These notes had medium seriffed
serial numbers with a bold Y prefix with the same signatures - C. J. Cerutty and J. R. Collins. Both the Fifty and Hundred pound
notes of the first design continued to be issued until the announcement on May 31 1945 that all notes over the value of £10
would no longer be legal tender after August 31 1945. By June 1950 records show that only 1,343 notes remained in circulation.
As notes were officially written off if not redeemed within forty years of date of issue there are now officially no notes left
in circulation.
The fifth signature combination
An unissued type of £50 note exists. This was prepared in 1939 to increase the supplies of the earlier issue that were already in
circulation. However the issue of the high denomination notes ceased in 1945 without the need for the issue of notes of this design.
The supplies were therefore destroyed in 1958 except for a few notes that were retained as specimens. The note, violet in colour, has
a vignette of George VI at left. On the right there is a window for the watermark of Captain Cook facing right. The denomination £50
appears in large print at the top right and left corner panels and smaller £50 denominations at bottom left and right. The words
COMMONWEALTH OF AUSTRALIA appears at the top centre with the words FIFTY underneath. The legal tender clause "This note is legal
tender for FIFTY POUNDS in the Commonwealth and in all the Territories under the control of the Commonwealth". There is a large £50
as the background print together with a mosaic of the number 50 printed in Letterpress. The signatures in black are those of
Hugh Traill Armitage - Governor Commonwealth Bank of Australia and Stuart Gordon McFarlane - Secretary to the Treasury. The serial
numbers are prefix letter over 0 and a six-digit serial number. The back of the note, also in violet intaglio, has a central panel
depicting mining with 5 men. One of them holding the handle of a windlass, another a bucket and pickaxe, the third a shovel, another
a sledgehammer, and the last a sample of ore. The denomination £50 near the centre right, balances the blank watermark panel and
together with ornate geometric designs there are the figures 50 in each corner of the design.
The sixth signature combination
This specimen banknote did not surface until 1996. The note was mounted with a light glue in a buff coloured folder in a manner similar
to earlier specimen notes of Edward VIII. The facsimile Coombs/Wilson signature combination, first used in late 1951, was added
after the notes were originally printed.
It is believed that the note was one of a proposed new series of Australian Banknotes which had been in preparation for a number of
years by that time. The pound with a portrait of George VI, Ten Shillings with Sir Henry Parks, Five Pounds with Sir Edmund Barton
and the Ten Pounds with Sir John Monash are all believed to be part of the same project. With the death of George VI early in
1952, it was decided not to proceed with these designs. All stocks were destroyed in 1958.
All high denomination banknotes were recalled after the Second World War. This was
gazetted in May 1945 as a national Security Regulation and it stated that after
August 31 1945 denominations of £20 and above would cease to be legal tender.
While this regulation never became law it had the effect of uncovering
nearly £5,700,000 in hoarded currency. At the end of 1945 the following notes
remained un-presented :
- £20 - 506
- £50 - 2,830
- £100 - 2,146
- £1,000 - 317
These notes only appear very rarely, so any valuations are largely hypothetical.
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