The Bill Board, a Numismatic Journey with Banknotes
The history of Canadian currency is a chronicle of the nation’s evolving identity, technological advancement, and economic maturation. Within this timeline, the "Scenes of Canada" series, issued between 1969 and 1979, stands as a pivotal chapter that bridged the traditionalist designs of the mid-20th century with the automated, high-security requirements of the modern era. This report provides an exhaustive numismatic analysis of a specific artifact from this period: the 1979 modification of the twenty-dollar banknote. The primary subject of this analysis is a circulated specimen identified by the serial number 56651101046. Through a detailed examination of this note, we can unravel a complex narrative involving the transition from manual to automated cash processing, the rivalry between Canada’s security printers, the aesthetic "multicolor" revolution in banknote design, and the enduring legacy of steel engraving. This report is structured to serve professional numismatists, historians, and serious collectors, offering deep-dive insights into the classification, production, and market valuation of the Bank of Canada 20 Dollars Type 1979 (Charlton BC-54 / Pick 93). The analysis confirms that the note in question is a standard circulation issue printed by the British American Bank Note Company (BABNC), likely bearing the signatures of Crow and Bouey, and represents a critical juncture in the Bank of Canada’s efforts to combat counterfeiting while adapting to the nascent era of electronic sorting machines. The following sections will dissect every aspect of this banknote, from the molecular composition of its paper to the geographic fidelity of its reverse vignette.
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