Truro News

New $10 bank note unveiled to celebrate Canada’s sesquicent­ennial

Bank already announced plans to put Viola Desmond on bill

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The Bank of Canada has unveiled a new $10 bank note to celebrate the 150th anniversar­y of Confederat­ion – and it will mark the first time an indigenous Canadian and a woman other than the Queen are featured on the country’s currency.

The mostly purple polymer note depicts the faces of four federal political figures the Bank of Canada says helped shape the country: Sir John A. Macdonald, Sir George-Etienne Cartier, Agnes Macphail and James Gladstone.

The bank has already announced plans to put human rights activist Viola Desmond on the $10 bill later next year, making Desmond the first woman to grace a regularly circulatin­g bank note.

The note marking the 150th anniversar­y, to be released in June, will be a commemorat­ive one and won’t replace the existing design.

Bank governor Stephen Poloz said the new $10 bill is intended to instill a sense of pride in what

Canadians have accomplish­ed as a nation.

The note’s front also carries images of Parliament’s Hall of Honour, the names of all the provinces and territorie­s and a depiction of the Memorial Chamber Arch in the Peace Tower of Parliament’s centre block.

On the back, a range of images are shown to capture the country’s diverse landscape, including mountains, Prairie wheat, the Canadians Shield, the East Coast and the Northern Lights.

The new note will be available in June when 40 million of them go into circulatio­n.

 ?? CP PHOTO ?? Governor of the Bank of Canada Stephen Poloz speaks after unveiling of the Canada 150 commemorat­ive bank note in Ottawa.
CP PHOTO Governor of the Bank of Canada Stephen Poloz speaks after unveiling of the Canada 150 commemorat­ive bank note in Ottawa.

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