Skip to content
  • FR
FR
  • About us
    Building, illuminated glass towers on either side of an old, square, stone building.

    About us

    We're here to help you understand what the Bank of Canada does and how it matters to you.

    About the Bank of Canada

    Find out what the Bank does, who runs the Bank and how it is separate from the political process.

    Connect with us

    We’d love to hear from you! Contact us by email, phone or mail—or join us on social media.

  • Visit

    Visit

    • Plan your visit
    • Group visits
    • Accessibility and special needs
    • Code of conduct
    • Health and safety

    Sensory Sundays

    We’re turning down the lights and the volume for our sensory-sensitive visitors—explore the Museum using more than eyes and ears.

    Connect with us

    We’d love to hear from you! Contact us by email, phone or mail—or join us on social media.

  • Explore

    Exhibitions

    • Permanent exhibition
    • Special exhibitions
    • Travelling exhibitions
    • Past exhibitions

    Blog

    Collection

    • About the Collection
    • Collection Services
    • Canadian Bank Notes Series
    • Search the Collection

    Speculating on the piggy bank

    Ever since the first currencies allowed us to store value, we’ve needed a special place to store those shekels, drachmae and pennies. And the piggy bank—whether in pig form or not—has nearly always been there.

  • Learn

    Learn

    • Activities and games
    • Education blog
    • External resources
    • Lesson plans
    • School programs
    • Video discussion guides
    • Upcoming webinars

    Entrepreneurship: Kids edition

    Learn from the experiences of successful young entrepreneurs, then create your own business model and pitch your business.

    You are the economy

    A set of six lessons to explore economics with your students.

  • Home
  • The Museum Blog

Canada Financially Comes of Age

By: Paul S. Berry


October 2, 2018
Share this page on Facebook
Share this page on Facebook
Share this page on X
Share this page on X
Share this page on LinkedIn
Share this page on LinkedIn
Share this page on Google Classroom Created with Sketch.
Share this page on Google Classroom
Share this page by email
Share this page by email

The First War Loan, November 1915

War is expensive. When Canada entered the conflict against Germany and her allies in 1914, one of the first questions MPs of the Borden government probably asked themselves was, “How are we going to pay for this?”

Historically, Canada relied on revenues from excise taxes and import duties to fund government initiatives. From time to time, this amount was supplemented by the sale of bonds to banks and brokerage firms in London and New York. With the outbreak of war in 1914, access to the British markets was restricted. So, the British Treasury lent Canada money to fund wartime operations. At the same time, we raised custom duties at home and borrowed money in New York through the sale of bonds. However, these revenue streams were insufficient to meet rising costs, so the Canadian government adopted a novel course. In November 1915, Canada looked to its own citizens to shoulder the financial burden of what would become the First World War and offered Canadians its first domestic bond issue.

First World War public war bond certificate of $100, 1915

100 bond First War Loan, November 1915. Bond, $100, Canada, 1915 (NCC.2002.072.002)

coupon attached to a $100 war bond

A coupon from a $100 First War Loan bond would represent interest earned over a specified period of time. Bond owners clip them and exchange them for money at their bank. Bond, $100, Canada, 1915 (NCC.2002.072.002)

Writing after the war, Finance Minister Sir Thomas White noted the cynicism expressed in 1915 over the likelihood of raising even 5 million dollars through a Canadian public bond offering—let alone the 50 million that was sought. The First War Loan of November 1915, however, proved to be an unmitigated success. When the subscription books were closed, 100 million dollars had been subscribed—double what was originally hoped for! The excess, some 50 million dollars, was used as a credit for the British government to purchase supplies in Canada such as munitions and foodstuffs. This was the first occasion that Canada, or in fact any other Dominion in the Empire, had loaned money to the mother country.

First World War public war bond certificate of $500, 1916

A $500 bond Second War Loan, October 1916. The Duke and Duchess of Connaught, Canada’s governor general and his wife, are pictured on a bond issued just before he left office in November, 1916. Bond, $500, Canada, 1916 (NCC.2002.072.004)

A First World War public war bond certificate of $100, 1917

A $100 bond Fourth War Loan, December 1917. HRH King George V and Queen Mary are pictured on this bond. Bond, $100, Canada, 1917 (NCC.2015.039.001)

Subsequent bond issues proved even more successful and demonstrated that Canada, financially, had come of age. From 1915 and 1918 there were 5 domestic bond offerings in which Canadians pledged more than $1.7 billion. During those years, all other revenue sources combined amounted to only half that sum. Even income tax, introduced in 1918 as what was meant to be temporary measure, couldn’t raise anywhere near this amount.

First World War public war bond certificate of $100, 1918

A $100 bond Fifth War Loan, December 1918. Funds from this loan were meant to cover immediate post war costs including gratuities for returning vets. Bond, $100, Canada, 1918 (NCC.2006.048.002)

The First War Loan included bonds in denominations of up to $100,000. They matured in ten years and paid interest at 5 percent. This was in line with other commercial offerings to make the loans appealing to investors. The principal amount was repayable to buyers on December 1, 1925 (date of maturity) at any office of the Receiver General or Assistant Receiver General; interest was paid semi-annually on June 1st and December 1st at any chartered bank in Canada. Like bank notes, these bonds were printed by security printers on secure paper using special inks and decorated with intricate designs that were difficult to imitate. Patriotic images of flags, beavers, maple leaves and a view of the Parliament buildings grace the $100 bonds and make them among the most beautiful Canadian government financial instruments ever issued.

We want to hear from you! Do you have an idea for a blog post you’d like to see?
Content type(s): Blog posts

Subscribe to The Museum Blog
The Museum Blog

July 28, 2014

Becoming a Collector V

By: Graham Iddon


Visual glossary of design and security details of Canadian Bank Note: 2004, $20 face
Suppose you walk into a bar frequented by currency collectors and in an attempt to join in you refer to a ‘planchette’ as a ‘rosette’ (beer mugs hit the tables and the pianist stops playing). This could be pretty humiliating and you’ll probably never be able to go to that bar again, at least not on numismatic night.
Content type(s): Blog posts
July 21, 2014

Becoming a Collector IV

By: Graham Iddon


Visual glossary of design details of Canadian coins
Now that you have a grasp of preservation techniques for coins, you might want to familiarize yourself with the finer points of their anatomy. It is all part of your numismatic education and besides, you need to be informed and sound informed when you are buying coins at flea markets or coin fairs.
Content type(s): Blog posts
July 7, 2014

Museum Reconstruction - Part 3

By: Graham Iddon


Bank of canada - Night
Though naturally we are aware that the former Museum space is being gutted, the reality of seeing it empty is still pretty strange for most of us here. In the last blog of this series we showed you the empty cafeteria space that will become the new Museum, as well as some images of the old Museum as it was at the time: stuffed with odds and ends of exhibit cases, the occasional display still on the walls.
Content type(s): Blog posts
June 23, 2014

CENTimental Journey

By: Graham Iddon


With all the blogging we’ve been doing for Voices from the Engraver, you’d think we had nothing else on our exhibition plate. We do, actually, and it’s called CENTimental Journey. This temporary exhibition, hosted at the Canadian Museum of History, walks you through more than 150 years of the Canadian 1 cent piece.
Content type(s): Blog posts
June 16, 2014

Museum Reconstruction - Part 2

By: Graham Iddon


We are coming up on a year since we closed the doors on the physical museum. During that year, we’ve worked very hard to make sure everybody knows that we are still a functioning museum and one that will be opening its doors again in a few years on a beautiful new space, with an expanded mission and mandate.
Content type(s): Blog posts
June 6, 2014

Becoming a Collector III

By: Graham Iddon


For you as the steward of your collection, your aim is to preserve the items as best as you can by protecting them from further deterioration. The pros call this preservation.
Content type(s): Blog posts
May 26, 2014

The Adventure of Exhibit Planning IV

By: Graham Iddon


This exhibition is about engravers, production processes and the beauty of postage stamps and bank notes. In the previous episode of this series we talked about the process surrounding securing the bank notes for this exhibition and how it had to take into account both the needs of the exhibition team and the concerns of the collections department.
Content type(s): Blog posts
May 20, 2014

Becoming a Collector II

By: Graham Iddon


So now you’ve decided that collecting currency is far more fascinating than collecting 14th Century Flemish altar paintings and have begun to accumulate some items. Good for you, those paintings are a bother to dust and currency is far easier to take care of.
Content type(s): Blog posts
  • « Previous
  • 1
  • 16
  • 17
  • 18
  • 19
  • 20
  • 21
  • Next »
Go To Page

30 Bank Street
Ottawa, ON
K1A 0G9, CANADA
613‑782‑8914

  • Things to do

  • Plan your visit
  • Find educational resources
  • Search the Collection
  • Connect with us
  • Things to see

  • Canadian bank notes
  • Exhibitions
  • Blog
  • Videos
  • Things to know

  • Accessibility and special needs
  • Careers
  • Code of conduct
  • Health and safety
  • Privacy
  • Social media
●●
Bank of Canada Museum

Visit the Bank of Canada web site ›

We use cookies to help us keep improving this website.

Accept and continue