1869 John Frazer (Gulf of Carpentaria) Sight Note aVF
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1869 John Frazer (Gulf of Carpentaria) Sight Note aVF

1869 John Frazer (Gulf of Carpentaria) Sight Note aVF

Issued on May 15th, 1869, this John Frazer sight note from Rockland near the Gulf of Carpentaria represents a tangible piece of Queensland’s colonial past. Denominated at One Pound and 13 pence and made payable to the uncertain R.B. Edwins Esquire, it reflects Frazer’s extensive pastoral and commercial interests during the late 1860s.

A prominent merchant and politician, Frazer rose from humble beginnings to establish a leading Sydney importing firm and held influential roles across major financial and insurance institutions. By the mid-1860s, he had heavily invested in Queensland cattle runs, with Rockland forming part of this expanding network.

This example is notable as one of the most affordable Frazer-issued sight notes encountered, based on face value. Though it shows condition issues, including edge separations and small pinholes, it survives as an intact and evocative relic of early Australian private currency and frontier enterprise.

$199.08

Original: $568.80

-65%
1869 John Frazer (Gulf of Carpentaria) Sight Note aVF

$568.80

$199.08

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1869 John Frazer (Gulf of Carpentaria) Sight Note aVF

Issued on May 15th, 1869, this John Frazer sight note from Rockland near the Gulf of Carpentaria represents a tangible piece of Queensland’s colonial past. Denominated at One Pound and 13 pence and made payable to the uncertain R.B. Edwins Esquire, it reflects Frazer’s extensive pastoral and commercial interests during the late 1860s.

A prominent merchant and politician, Frazer rose from humble beginnings to establish a leading Sydney importing firm and held influential roles across major financial and insurance institutions. By the mid-1860s, he had heavily invested in Queensland cattle runs, with Rockland forming part of this expanding network.

This example is notable as one of the most affordable Frazer-issued sight notes encountered, based on face value. Though it shows condition issues, including edge separations and small pinholes, it survives as an intact and evocative relic of early Australian private currency and frontier enterprise.

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Issued on May 15th, 1869, this John Frazer sight note from Rockland near the Gulf of Carpentaria represents a tangible piece of Queensland’s colonial past. Denominated at One Pound and 13 pence and made payable to the uncertain R.B. Edwins Esquire, it reflects Frazer’s extensive pastoral and commercial interests during the late 1860s.

A prominent merchant and politician, Frazer rose from humble beginnings to establish a leading Sydney importing firm and held influential roles across major financial and insurance institutions. By the mid-1860s, he had heavily invested in Queensland cattle runs, with Rockland forming part of this expanding network.

This example is notable as one of the most affordable Frazer-issued sight notes encountered, based on face value. Though it shows condition issues, including edge separations and small pinholes, it survives as an intact and evocative relic of early Australian private currency and frontier enterprise.