(Hong Kong) | |
---|---|
Value | 0.01 Hong Kong dollars |
Width | 89 mm |
Height | 41 mm |
Security features | none |
Paper type | Cotton |
Years of printing | various years depending on signature |
After the surrender of Japan in 1945, the dollar was reestablished as the currency, a uniside brown note with a portrait of the British monarch, and no serial numbers were ever found on the notes.
However, over the years of printing there have been five different signatures from five Government Financial Secretaries(namely Sir Henry Butters, Sir John Cowperthwaite, Sir Philip Haddon-Cave, Sir John Henry Bremridge, Sir Piers Jacobs and Sir Hamish Macleod) on the one-cent note. People can find their notes' year of issue on web pages littered around the Internet. These notes had five major issues: the first issued from 1941 bearing a portrait of King George VI, then a total of five issues from 1961-1971, 1971-1981, 1981-1986, 1986-1992 and the final generation from 1992 until the demonetisation of the one-cent note in 1995. All had the picture of Queen Elizabeth II on the front.
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