Northern Bank £5 note explained

Country:United Kingdom
Denomination:Five pounds
Value:£5 sterling
Security Features:Raised print, watermark see-through window, microprinting, UV feature
Paper Type:Polymer
Years Of Printing:1999 (last design)
Reverse Design:Space Shuttle
Reverse Design Date:1999

The Northern Bank £5 note was a banknote issued by Northern Bank for circulation in Northern Ireland, United Kingdom. It was the smallest denomination note issued by the bank. Following the takeover of Northern Bank by Danske Bank in 2004, production of the note ended and it was slowly removed from circulation.

History

In October 1999 a special polymer version featuring an illustration of the Space Shuttle was issued in celebration of the millennium. It was the first polymer banknote used in the United Kingdom.[1] After the Northern Bank robbery in which £26.5 million was stolen, Northern Bank reprinted all of its banknotes with different designs apart from the £5 note which was not replaced.

Design

List of historical designs

NoteFirst issuedColourSizeDesignAdditional information
series 1927–19681927
series 1970–19861995 Green 156 × 85 mm Front: Walter Scott; Back: Arts and culture
series 1988–19901988 Green 136 × 70 mm [2]
Millennium 21 December 1999 Green 135 × 70 mm Space Shuttle[3]

External links

Notes and References

  1. News: O'Neill. Julian. Plastic note pioneer Northern Ireland beats Britain by 17 years. 9 October 2017. BBC News.
  2. Web site: Banknote catalog › Ireland-Northern › Banknotes. colnect.com. 9 October 2017.
  3. Web site: Issue: Five Pounds Background. polymernotes.com. 9 October 2017.