Pre-SARB · The Free-Banking Era
Victorian-era Cape banknotes.
Before the South African Reserve Bank existed, before the Union of 1910, before sterling-area unification — the Cape Colony of the Victorian era ran on the paper of private banks and country businesses. Over the period from the mid-19th century to the eve of SARB consolidation in 1921, dozens of issuers across the Western Cape printed and circulated their own notes. The eleven principal Victorian-era Cape issuers identified by Bergman (1968) and Hern (2010) anchor this reference.
Curated by Ben & Johan Ungerer · The Jardines Curatorial Desk
The free-banking era
Context for the SeriesFrom the establishment of the Cape Colony's first commercial banks in the 1830s and 1840s through the consolidation of the South African Reserve Bank in 1921, the Cape operated under what historians describe as a free-banking system: a regime in which private banks could issue their own banknotes against their own reserves, redeemable on demand at the issuing institution. Country merchants, shipping agents, and town businesses occasionally issued their own scrip as well, particularly in remoter districts of the Western Cape where formal banking infrastructure remained thin.
The system held together for the better part of a century. Most of the notes circulated locally — trusted within the geographic radius in which the issuer's name carried weight, less trusted beyond it. Many of the issuers eventually failed, were absorbed by larger banks (notably Standard Bank from the 1860s onward), or were folded into the eventual SARB framework when the 1920 South African Reserve Bank Act was passed. By 1921, all private-bank note issuance had ceased, and the Reserve Bank held the sole right to issue South African currency.
What survives is fragmentary. Most Victorian-era Cape banknotes were redeemed at face and destroyed; surviving examples are rare to extremely rare, with single-digit population counts the norm rather than the exception. The Bergman 1968 catalogue — Walter Bergman's A History of Regular and Emergency Paper Money Issues of South Africa — was the first serious attempt to catalogue the surviving issues. Brian Hern's South African Banknotes & Papermoney Pre-Reserve Bank (2010) updated and extended Bergman's framework with auction records, additional discoveries, and corrected attributions. Pierre Nortje's WCNS work on Victorian-era banknotes of the towns of the South Western Cape sits alongside Bergman and Hern as the principal modern reference.
The principal issuers
Eleven Names Across the Western CapeCape of Good Hope Bank
1837 — 1890
The Cape's first joint-stock bank. Notes issued from Cape Town across more than five decades. Folded into a London-based combine in 1890.
South African Bank
1855 — 1877
One of the larger early commercial banks of the Cape. Notes circulated across the Western Cape with a strong presence in the wine districts.
Standard Bank of British South Africa
1862 onward
The London-incorporated bank that absorbed many of the smaller Cape issuers from the 1860s. Standard Bank Cape branch notes are the largest surviving population of the era.
Stellenbosch District Bank
1882 — c.1903
The principal country-bank issuer of the wine district. Notes circulated chiefly within Stellenbosch and surrounding farmlands.
Paarl Bank
1865 — c.1901
Country bank serving the agricultural community north of Cape Town. Notes are among the rarer survivors of the period.
Swellendam Bank
Mid-Victorian
Country-bank issue from the Overberg town. Recorded in Bergman 1968 but represented in modern catalogues by only a small handful of surviving examples.
Worcester Commercial Bank
Mid-Victorian
Inland district issue serving the Breede River valley. Subject of one of Nortje's WCNS treatments on the broader towns-of-the-South-Western-Cape paper-money record.
Beaufort West Bank
Mid-Victorian
Karoo-frontier issue. Notes from this issuer are among the rarest of the eleven; the population in collector hands is in single digits.
Town & district issuers
Various, c.1850 — 1900
A category rather than a single name — private notes and scrip issued by country merchants, shipping agents, and town businesses across the Western Cape, recorded across Bergman, Hern, and Nortje's treatments. Many issues are unique or near-unique.
Bank of Africa
1879 — 1912
One of the late-Victorian arrivals. Cape branch notes were absorbed into the Anglo-Standard combine in the early years of Union.
National Bank of the O.F.S.
Cape branch issues
The Orange Free State's national bank operated branches in the Cape. Cape-branch notes are catalogued separately from Bloemfontein-issue material.
Survival, rarity, and the modern market
A Note on PopulationPractical reference
Most issues are extremely rare.
The defining feature of the Victorian-era Cape banknote market is the population. Surviving examples of many issues are in single digits across all known collections, institutional and private. The Hern 2010 catalogue's rarity ratings carry meaningful weight: a Hern-rated R9 or R10 Victorian Cape note is, in practice, an opportunity that may not recur in any given decade.
The market is correspondingly thin. Most named issues trade only when an established Cape paper-money cabinet is dispersed; otherwise specimens may sit unmoved for decades in institutional collections. Iziko / Cape Town Museums, the South African Library's manuscript holdings, and the National Library of South Africa together hold the largest publicly-accessible reference population. For the collector, the practical takeaway is conservative: build the reference shelf first (Bergman 1968, Hern 2010, the Nortje WCNS articles), then watch the auction record for individual issues to surface.
The references
Published Sources- Bergman, Walter.A History of Regular and Emergency Paper Money Issues of South Africa (1968). The foundational catalogue of pre-Union and emergency South African paper money. The framework on which all subsequent work is built.
- Hern, Brian.South African Banknotes & Papermoney Pre-Reserve Bank (2010). The modern standard catalogue. Updates Bergman with auction records, additional discoveries, and corrected attributions. The essential reference for the current market.
- Nortje, Pierre H.Victorian-era Banknotes of Towns of the South Western Cape. Western Cape Numismatic Society. Modern essay on the country-town issuers; the principal recent treatment of the smaller-district paper-money record.
- South African Reserve Bank Act, 1920.Statutes. The legislative instrument that ended private-bank note issuance in South Africa and consolidated the right of issuance in SARB from 1921.
Revision history
Living DocumentKeep exploring
Related ReadingPre-1921 banknotes
The broader survey of South African pre-SARB paper money — including the ZAR Mafeking, Boer Republic, and other non-Cape issues that sit outside the Victorian-Cape scope.
— The 1868 outlier —Griqualand-East £1, 1868
One of the more unusual surviving Victorian-era issues — the Griqualand East note that predates much of the Western Cape free-banking record.
— The successor —First SARB issues
The 1921 — 1930s SARB notes that replaced the entire private-bank Victorian-era framework. The institutional consolidation that closed the era.