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Jardines Galleries · Before the SARB · 1782 – 1921 · 139 years of free banking

Pre-1921 banknotes.

Before the South African Reserve Bank was established in 1921, paper money in South Africa was issued by colonial governments, roughly thirty private banks, the ZAR government, and — during the Anglo-Boer War — besieged towns and POW camps. The era opens with Dutch Governor Van Plettenberg's first paper issue in 1782 and closes with the SARB taking over central note-issue authority in 1921. This is the sequel to the Early Colonial Currency page — what came after the 1825 sterling introduction.

1782 — First paper · Van Plettenberg —
~30 — Private banks · 1837 – 1920 —
1876 — Stellenbosch collapse —
1921 — SARB · Era ends —

Four parallel issuers

The 139 years before the SARB divide into four overlapping issuer categories. Government paper ran from 1782 (Dutch Van Plettenberg) through to 1841. Private banks proliferated from 1837 to 1920 — roughly thirty across the country. The ZAR government issued its own notes from 1872 to 1902. And during the Anglo-Boer War (1899 – 1902), besieged towns and POW camps printed emergency paper. All four issuer types overlapped in time — at any given moment in the late 19th century, multiple currencies were in circulation.

— Issuer 01 · Colonial government — 1782 – 1841

Government paper

The foundational chapter — colonial government paper begins with Dutch authority and continues through the British takeover into the sterling era.

  • 1782 — first paper money issued by Dutch Governor Van Plettenberg. The Cape's introduction to paper currency.
  • 1793Lombaard Bank established as the first State bank.
  • 1825 – 1841"red stamp" and "oblong stamp" rixdollar notes. The 40-rixdollar note of 1831 is unique — the only known example is held by the South African Public Library.
  • J.B. Ebden specimens (late 1820s) — Cape of Good Hope Bank 5-shilling notes, now held by the Smithsonian Institution.
— Issuer 02 · Approximately thirty private banks — 1837 – 1920

Private banks

The longest and most fragmented chapter — roughly thirty private banks issued notes across the Cape, Natal, and the interior. Most were small regional operations; some failed spectacularly. The era produced both modest local issues and the rare survivors that fetch four-figure prices today.

  • Cape of Good Hope Bank (1837) — the first private bank to issue notes in SA.
  • Stellenbosch Bank (1854) — collapsed in 1876 after fraud and the suicide of its principal. The era's most infamous failure.
  • Stellenbosch District Bank (1882 – 1990s) — the survivor that outlived almost every other private bank, operating well past the SARB era.
  • Wellington Bank — £5 note sold $7,200 in 2023. $7,200 · 2023
  • Swellendam Bank — £5 note sold $5,520 in 2024. $5,520 · 2024
  • Malmesbury Agricultural & Commercial Bank — only one note known to be PMG-graded.
The Stellenbosch Bank collapse · 1876 — The era's signature crisis. Founded 1854, the bank's failure 22 years later — driven by fraud and the suicide of its principal — became the cautionary tale of free-banking SA. The survivor, Stellenbosch District Bank, was founded in 1882 in the wake of that failure and ran for more than a century afterwards. The two banks share the town's name but represent opposite outcomes of the same fragmented system.
— Issuer 03 · Zuid-Afrikaansche Republiek — 1872 – 1902

ZAR government notes

The ZAR's parallel currency system — alongside its gold and silver coinage (covered in the ZAR Hub), the government issued its own paper notes. The chapter ends with the Anglo-Boer War and the dissolution of the ZAR itself.

  • 1872 1 PondWilliam Brown issue. Rare survivor of the early ZAR paper era. $700 – 1,500
  • 1900 issues (Pretoria) — denominations of 1, 5, 10, and 50 Pounds issued from the capital.
  • 1901 1 Pound (Pietersburg) — issued from the wartime capital after British advance.
  • 1902 "Te Velde" notes — literally "in the field" — the final ZAR paper produced as the war wound down. $200 – 400
— Issuer 04 · Wartime emergency — 1899 – 1902

Siege notes

The era's most distinctive numismatic chapter — locally-printed emergency paper from besieged Anglo-Boer War towns and POW camps. Geographically scattered, historically anchored, with hard provenance attaching to specific sieges and prisoner camps.

  • Mafeking — denominations 1s, 2s, 3s, 10s, and £1. The £1 note (issued March 1900) is especially sought after. $1,000 – 2,000
  • Kimberleyarchival records survive; notes themselves extremely rare. The institutional documentation outpaces surviving specimens.
  • Ladysmithpostal history and diaries survive; notes extremely rare. Documentation pattern parallels Kimberley.
  • Green Point TrackPOW camp "Good Fors" issued at the Cape Town prisoner-of-war camp. Complete sets of four sell at £70 – 100. £70 – 100 · set of 4
  • Diyatalawa (Ceylon)Boer POW notes from the Ceylon prisoner camp. A one-rupee note sold R28,000 in 2022. R28,000 · 2022

Sources

— Reference works for this page —
  • Hern, Brian. South African Banknotes & Papermoney Pre-Reserve Bank (2010). The specialist reference for pre-1921 SA paper money.
  • Bergman, Walter. A History of Regular and Emergency Paper Money Issues of South Africa (1968). The standard work on regular and wartime emergency issues — see also the Bibliography.
  • Noble Numismatics auction archives. Primary source for the auction prices cited above.
  • Heritage Auctions. US-based archives covering the high-grade survivor notes.
  • Western Cape Numismatic Society research. Specialist analysis on individual notes and issuers — see Numismatic Societies.

Library cross-references

Revision history

22 Feb 2026 Initial build · four-issuer structure · siege chapter
The South African Numismatic Library A division of Jardines Galleries · © 2026