This is Somerset
Wednesday, February 27, 2013----------------------------------------------------------------------------
This article fails to mention that 5 pounds in 1833 would have the purchasing power 504 pounds due to inflation. The Bank of England's inflation rate from 1833 to 2012 was 2.6% per year. This note however has been cancelled as noted by the XXXXX over the signature and was likely removed from circulation. It therefore should not have any face value only numismatic value.
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A five pound note sold for 85 times it’s face value last week.
The Glastonbury and Shepton Mallet Bank five pound note was dated 1833 and expected to reach between £100 and £200 in the February 20 auction in Wells but was snapped up for £425 by one eager buyer at McCubbing & Redfern, Wells Auction Rooms.
Provincial private banks started in the 18th century but
it was only by the 1820s that most of the major towns had their own
banks, and each issued their own local banknotes. These banks, however, were rare and often shortlived with many having precarious financial stability.
Banknotes at this time were almost like IOUs and could only be used locally. If the bank collapsed the notes became worthless. By 1826 legislation was established whereby banks could join forces into what was called joint stock banks.This offered the smaller establishments stability. The Glastonbury and Shepton Mallet Bank was established in 1812
by partners John Lilly, Charles Brown, John Fry Reeves and Marshall
Williams.
Wells itself had a branch of the bank open in 1820.
The Glastonbury and Shepton Mallet Bank, along with several other West Country banks, was later incorporated into Stuckey’s Banking Co. of Langport in 1835.
Banknotes from these early banks are rare and highly sought after by local historians, families and of course, banknote collectors. It is was in the late 1950s that banknote collecting began.
By the 1960s virtually every country in the world used banknotes and it is an area of collecting that is highly accessible. As a hobby, banknote collecting is interesting, easy to store and display and can prove to be an excellent investment; especially if one specialises in the rarer, quality banknotes.
The Glastonbury and Shepton Mallet Bank five pound note was dated 1833 and expected to reach between £100 and £200 in the February 20 auction in Wells but was snapped up for £425 by one eager buyer at McCubbing & Redfern, Wells Auction Rooms.
Wells itself had a branch of the bank open in 1820.
The Glastonbury and Shepton Mallet Bank, along with several other West Country banks, was later incorporated into Stuckey’s Banking Co. of Langport in 1835.
Banknotes from these early banks are rare and highly sought after by local historians, families and of course, banknote collectors. It is was in the late 1950s that banknote collecting began.
By the 1960s virtually every country in the world used banknotes and it is an area of collecting that is highly accessible. As a hobby, banknote collecting is interesting, easy to store and display and can prove to be an excellent investment; especially if one specialises in the rarer, quality banknotes.
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