Earliest Hong Kong banknote ever discovered to be offered at Dix Noonan Webb

The First Art Newspaper on the Net    Established in 1996 Thursday, April 25, 2024


Earliest Hong Kong banknote ever discovered to be offered at Dix Noonan Webb
Issued by the Oriental Bank Corporation - the first bank to open a branch in Hong Kong - the note is dated 1 June 1860, and has the serial number 20465. It is estimated to sell for £30,000-50,000.



LONDON.- Dix Noonan Webb will be offering a remarkable and recently discovered ‘Hong Kong 1860’ Five Dollar Banknote - the earliest known fully issued banknote of any denomination for Hong Kong - in their auction of British, Irish and World Banknotes on Thursday, August 26, 2021 at their Mayfair saleroom (16 Bolton Street, London W1J 8BQ). It is likely to exceed its estimate of £30,000-50,000.

Issued by the Oriental Bank Corporation - the first bank to open a branch in Hong Kong - the note is dated 1 June 1860, and has the serial number 20465. It bears the signature of the Manager, John McDouall, at right and the Accountant, James Webster, at left, with a Royal Coat of Arms at upper centre. The only other issued notes from the Oriental Bank Corporation to have survived are dated 1866 and 1879, three of which are in private collections, and several others in institutions. It is interesting to note that throughout its history, the Bank had its head office in London and a sizeable branch in Edinburgh. The majority of its Court of Directors were Scottish, along with a great many of its senior overseas staff.

As Andrew Pattison, Head of Banknote Department at Dix Noonan Webb, explains: “The managers signature on the lower right of this remarkable note is that of a Scotsman, John McDouall. McDouall was born in Stranraer, Dumfries and Galloway, on the 7th February 1831. When Hong Kong was officially founded in 1841 he was only ten years old, but in 1851, by the age of 20, John McDouall had made his way to the territory and started work at the newly chartered Oriental Bank Corporation. John must have been bright, and a hard worker, because by the time this banknote was issued in 1860, he was managing the Hong Kong branch of the bank. At the time of his death, at the age of just 53, he had risen to the position of manager of the entire Oriental Bank Corporation, at the time the wealthiest and most successful bank in the region. He married an American of good family, Adeline Huttleston, in 1867 and had two children, Mary and John. Tragically, McDouall was killed in a carriage accident in 1873. He was buried in Hong Kong cemetery and his grave can still be found there alongside that of his daughter Mary, who died at the age of only two months.

Pattison has also discovered: “The signature on the left is James Webster of Crail, Fife. He was born in 1833, a little after John McDouall, and began his banking career in Crail itself, as a clerk. By 1859 he had taken a position as an assistant accountant at the Oriental Bank Corporation in Hong Kong, at almost the same time McDouall became manager. Webster had left the bank by 1865 and returned to his home town, although he continued to work all over the world in banking, shipping and commerce. At various times he appears to have lived and worked in Nevada (United States), Yokohama (Japan), South America and Egypt. During later life he was a significant figure in Crail, entering many agricultural shows and painting positions on the board of many local establishments. He married twice but had no children, and died in 1913 in Burntisland, close to his place of birth in Fife.

He continues: “We are very pleased to be selling this wonderfully rare banknote which furthers our understanding of early banknote issuance in Hong Kong. The consignor is unsure how it arrived in the UK, but we can surmise that it came back here in the late 1800s, probably with a British person working or travelling in the Far East, and lay undiscovered for over 150 years. $5 was a lot of money in Hong Kong in 1860 so for someone to have this note and not redeem it is quite unusual. They probably brought it back here and forgot about it!”




The Oriental Bank was an evolution of an earlier institution, the Bank of Western India, which was founded in 1842. It expanded quickly, opening branches all over India and South-east Asia, and was renamed The Oriental Bank. Following the acquisition of the Bank of Ceylon in 1850, the bank was granted a Royal Charter and was renamed the Oriental Bank Corporation in 1851. By the mid 1850s the bank had over 20 branches, with some as far afield as New Zealand, California, and Mauritius, most of which were issuing banknotes.

The Oriental Bank was the first bank to open a branch in Hong Kong. It was the only bank to issue notes there until 1858, when the Mercantile Bank of India, London & China opened its doors. This was rapidly followed by several other banks in the mid 1860s but by this time the Oriental Bank Corporation was the pre-eminent exchange bank, and banknote issuer in the region, with a paid-up capital of over £1,500,000.

Following several financial disasters in the 1870s, the bank ceased trading in 1884. Although it was reformed as the New Oriental Bank Corporation, this too failed, and the bank finally closed its doors in 1892.

Starting in 1846, the Oriental Bank was the first bank to issue notes in Hong Kong, although no examples are thought to have survived. This note, dated 1860, is of a type that was issued between 1851 and 1865. Interestingly, it was issued in the same year that Kowloon was officially ceded to the British at the Convention of Peking, following the Second Opium War.

This note was printed by Batho & Bingley, a relatively small London printer that operated from the early 1830’s through to the late 1850’s. All notes issued by the Oriental Bank (and the Oriental Bank Corporation) in Hong Kong from 1846 until 1865 were printed by Batho & Bingley, after which the contract was taken over by Perkins Bacon.

Batho & Bingley also printed notes for the Oriental Bank in Singapore, Ceylon, Australia, India and probably their other branches as well. As the bank gradually ran out of Batho & Bingley notes in each of these branches, all new printing contracts were instead awarded to Perkins Bacon. It is also interesting to note that a Batho & Bingley design for a Glasgow Bank note, produced in the mid 1840s, is almost identical to this note in all respects. This is another Scottish connection, and may explain why such an obscure printing company was chosen to provide notes for a major overseas bank.










Today's News

August 18, 2021

What constitutes art sales under duress? A dispute reignites the question.

World-renowned artist Mark di Suvero exhibits paintings at San Luis Obispo Museum of Art

The Colonial Williamsburg Foundation acquires rare Paul Revere tankard

Guarding the last likeness of a loathed dictator? It's a thankless job.

Pérez Art Museum Miami announces new acquisitions by thirteen artists for permanent collection

National Endowment for the Humanities announces new grants

Highly-anticipated "The Art of Banksy" exhibition opens in Chicago

Earliest Hong Kong banknote ever discovered to be offered at Dix Noonan Webb

Antwerp-based DMW Gallery and Base-Alpha Gallery join forces to open a new gallery in Brussels

Michael Krebber's first solo exhibition in Italy on view at The Antonio Dalle Nogare Foundation

Chairman of H&H Classics, Simon Hope, to sell part of his private collection at Duxford

Taschen publishes a definitive survey of Kengo Kuma's oeuvre

Paul Holberton to publish "Towards the Sun: The Artist-Traveller at the Turn of the Twentieth Century"

Powerhouse welcomes new Chief Operating Officer

Parishioners killed in quake-damaged historic Haiti church

Lincoln Center hopes a $20 million donation will help fuel a revival

Ankara print dresses? These aren't Shakespeare's 'Merry Wives.'

It's never too late to record your first album

Rosenwald-Wolf Gallery reopens with exhibition of works by Mike Cloud

Recent work by artist Aaron Nachtailer presented alongside the Unesco monuments in Ravenna

UK adults planning 66m trips to museums and galleries this summer

Palazzo Biscari presents "Mondo: Museo Archeologico del Reale"

A soprano with a bottomless appetite for risk

Greenwich Living Design has new name, new look, new location

The Facts You Need to Consider Before playing online casinos

INJ Architecture Design solutions and steps

Why Mezzanine Floor Inspection is Necessary

How to Grow a Massive Instagram Following

Top Reasons Why Casinos Are Gaining Wide Acceptance

How to Detoxify the Extra Amount of Cocaine from your Body?

Interview: Yujie Jiang, AR Visual Designer, Talks About AR Technology Power In Our Life




Museums, Exhibits, Artists, Milestones, Digital Art, Architecture, Photography,
Photographers, Special Photos, Special Reports, Featured Stories, Auctions, Art Fairs,
Anecdotes, Art Quiz, Education, Mythology, 3D Images, Last Week, .

 



Founder:
Ignacio Villarreal
(1941 - 2019)
Editor & Publisher: Jose Villarreal
Art Director: Juan José Sepúlveda Ramírez

Royalville Communications, Inc
produces:

ignaciovillarreal.org juncodelavega.com facundocabral-elfinal.org
Founder's Site. Hommage
to a Mexican poet.
Hommage
       

The First Art Newspaper on the Net. The Best Versions Of Ave Maria Song Junco de la Vega Site Ignacio Villarreal Site
Tell a Friend
Dear User, please complete the form below in order to recommend the Artdaily newsletter to someone you know.
Please complete all fields marked *.
Sending Mail
Sending Successful