National Post

Special $10 note aims to instil pride

150TH ANNIVERSAR­Y

- Terry Pedwell

• The Bank of Canada has unveiled a new commemorat­ive $10 bank note to celebrate the 150th anniversar­y of Confederat­ion — and it will mark the first time a Canadian woman and an indigenous Canadian have been featured on the country’s currency.

It is also just the fourth time in Canada’s history that a special, commemorat­ive bank note has been produced.

The new, mostly purple polymer note “is intended to captivate our imaginatio­n and instil pride in what we, as a nation, have accomplish­ed,” bank governor Stephen Poloz said as he revealed that the note was three years in the making. “It celebrates the natural beauty and majesty of our land and some of the important parliament­arians who helped shape our great country.”

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

Macphail, a champion of equality and human rights, was Canada’s first female member of Parliament. First elected in 1921, she later went on to provincial politics, winning a seat in the Ontario legislatur­e in 1943.

The bank had 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.

Gladstone, known by his Blackfoot name Akay- namuka, was a member of the Kainai, or Blood, First Nation who fought for indigenous rights. In 1958, he became the first person of First Nations origin named to the Senate.

The note marking the country’s 150th anniversar­y, to be released before summer, will be a commemorat­ive and won’t replace the existing design.

Its 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. The arch includes a colour- shifting security feature designed to prevent counterfei­ting. There are also maple leaves that appear to be 3D, but are flat to the touch.

On the back, a range of images capture the country’s diverse landscape, including the “Lions” or “Twin Sisters” mountains overlookin­g Vancouver, a Prairie wheat field, the Canadian Shield in Central Canada, Cape Bonavista on the East Coast and the Northern Lights.

The new note will be available June 1 when 40 million go into circulatio­n.

 ?? CHRIS ROUSSAKIS / BLOOMBERG ?? A woman and indigenous Canadian are featured.
CHRIS ROUSSAKIS / BLOOMBERG A woman and indigenous Canadian are featured.

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