CPM Forum
Canadian Notes => Early Canadian Notes => Topic started by: rarecoins2001 on February 14, 2012, 03:21:18 pm
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I tried to find where Honiton is but it keeps showing up as a place in England where Sir Issac Brock is buried. Did it exist in Canada before? I am referring to this note.
http://img824.imageshack.us/img824/3153/brantford.jpg
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No one seems post know or reply to posts about the older notes.
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A very interesting question to say the least! I also could find no reference to there ever having been a Honiton in Ontario. However, there is a Honiton Street in Toronto, and perhaps elsewhere in Ontario. Two similar notes were sold at auction last summer:
http://auctions.tcnccoins.com/The-Bank-of-Brantford-1859-1-O-P-HONITON-1st-May-1862-two-notes-One-is-G-4-the-other-VG-8_i10734972
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Since the target area for circulating these dubious notes was the US mid west, I looked for a Honiton there some time ago with absolutely no success. I highly doubt if the Honiton in England was intended. It would appear that either there was a Honiton at one time whose name subsequently changed, or there never was such a place. The latter possibility would be in keeping with this "wild cat" bank, whose purpose was to issue notes with no intention to redeem them.
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Actually, Honiton is near the place where John Graves Simcoe is buried, not Brock.