Skit & Advertising Notes Ireland

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DOC
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Skit & Advertising Notes Ireland

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Skit notes and advertising notes resemble banknotes but are not intended to be used as such. Their design is often based on real banknotes with a humorous or satirical twist. These notes frequently contain interesting commentary on the social and political situation of the time and often provide insights regarding early note designs.

Here is an example of a skit note with an Irish association, promoting the Christmas Pantomime at The Theatre Royal, Dublin, in 1848. The design is based on a Bank of Ireland £1 of the late 1840’s. An example of a Bank of Ireland £1 banknote (albeit a contemporary forgery) is included for comparison.
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Theatre Royal Skit Note 26th Dec 1848.jpg
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Bank of Ireland 1 Pound Contemporary Forgery 16th June 1848.jpg
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Mac
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Re: Skit & Advertising Notes Ireland

Post by Mac »

It is a very good likeness. I wonder if the skit note is of a similar size to the actual note.
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Re: Skit & Advertising Notes Ireland

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Here is another skit note based on a Bank of Ireland £1 note, this one from 1918-1919, I believe – a £1 note of the era is pictured below it for comparison.
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Royal-College-of-Surgeons-Dublin-Tea-skit-note.jpg
Royal-College-of-Surgeons-Dublin-Tea-skit-note.jpg (102.73 KiB) Viewed 1484 times
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Image
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This note was in DNW (now Noonans) Banknote sale on 14 March 2009, Lot 1000, and is a particular favourite of mine.

Whiteside & Co Promise to give the bearer on Demand One Pound Tea
at their premises Market Entrance South Great Georges Street Dublin

Signed by the Professor of Chemistry
Royal College of Surgeons
Charles A. Cameron.

Charles Alexander Cameron (1830-1921) was elected professor of chemistry to the College of Surgeons in Ireland in 1874, according to the Noonans Lot footnote.
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Re: Skit & Advertising Notes Ireland

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Here is a skit note based on the design of a Bank of Ireland £100 note from the Series introduced in 1838. The large compressed text reads ‘FIRST PRIZE IN PRIZE DRAWING’. There are no known surviving examples of a real Bank of Ireland £100 note from this era, so the skit note provides a useful insight to the design.
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Skit Note Bank of Ireland 100 Pounds ca. 1838-1919.jpg
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Re: Skit & Advertising Notes Ireland

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Here is a skit note for the ‘Bank of Comfort’ based on a Bank of Ireland £100 note from the 1830’s. The note is an advertisement for Kilroy’s Hotel in Galway and promises to ‘serve up a dinner or supper as well as any man or forfeit 100 pounds’. The note bears the signature of John Kilroy proprietor of the hotel and is dated 1st April 1833. As no examples of Bank of Ireland £100 notes from this era are known to have survived, this note provides a useful insight into the design used as well as capturing some interesting social history of the time.
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Bank of Comfort Skit Note 100 Pounds 1st April 1833.jpg
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Re: Skit & Advertising Notes Ireland

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That is a super example. It has followed the general design of mid-1830s Bank of Ireland notes, with twin Hibernia vignettes. It is well printed also. A very useful insight into the design of the £100.
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Re: Skit & Advertising Notes Ireland

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Yes, the print quality is remarkably good and there is a printer’s imprint ‘Johnston, Edin.’ This respected engraving company, W. & A. K. Johnston, was based in Edinburgh, Scotland.

They also printed a skit note for £5 dated 1833 and based on the Bank of Ireland £5 notes of the time. The realistic appearance of these notes resulted in attempts to pass them as genuine notes in the 1830’s.
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Bank of Comfort 5 Pounds 1833.JPG
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Re: Skit & Advertising Notes Ireland

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Interesting! £5 was quite a large amount back then. I guess that the shop-boy was not familiar with the notes.
And, it didn't take long to catch the person who had passed the note!
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Re: Skit & Advertising Notes Ireland

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An interesting piece of Irish social history in the form of a skit or advertising note was in Noonans most recent sale. Jimmy O'Dea and Harry O'Donovan worked together in Dublin from 1929 according to O'Dea's Wikipedia entry https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jimmy_O%27Dea

The note itself is simply designed and undated but would probably have been issued around 1929.
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Re: Skit & Advertising Notes Ireland

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Yes, those skit notes provide an interesting insight into the social history of the time. Jimmy O’Dea is also well known for his work in pantomine with actress Maureen Potter. There may well be other examples of skit notes out there associated with the theatre in Ireland.
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