Caroline Chisholm appeared on the reverse of the old paper Five Dollar notes from their introduction in 1967 until their withdrawal in 1992.
When we got the new polymer notes, a new design was made for each type and all Australian banknotes got new faces on them.
The new polymer Australian Five Dollar note first issued in 1992, has Queen Elizabeth II on the front and old and new Parliament houses on the reverse.
The Centenary of Federation Five Dollar note issued only in 2001, featured Sir Henry Parkes on the front and Catherine Helen Spence on the reverse.
The image of "One Pound Jimmy" on the reverse of the Australian Two Dollar coin was taken from an etching by Ainslie Roberts. The Royal Australian Mint advises that the image does not depict any particular individual, living or dead.
OBV: Portrait of AB 'Banjo' PatersonBased on a photograph of him taken at the time of his return to the Boer War in 1900. The photograph is held by the Paterson Estate.REV: Portrait of Dame Mary GilmoreBased on a photograph of Gilmore taken in her early twenties. This photograph has appeared in the Australian encyclopaedia and is held by the National Library of Australia.
1985 was only the second year of issue for the Australian One Dollar coin which was issued as a general circulation coin with about 91.4 million minted and a Proof coin with about 75,000 minted. Apart from the usual clips, dings and damaged planchets, there is no record of coins being taken off the market due to a design fault.
Milo was an Australian "invention", but has long since ceased to be an Australian product since the company was taken over by foreign interests.
Money was taken from wealthy states
Ian Thorpe
Money was taken from wealthy states
The Chisholm Trail was a trail that was used to drive cattle overland from ranches in Texas to Kansas rail heads during the late 19th century. The trail is named for Jesse Chisholm, who had built several trading posts in what is now western Oklahoma.
The Australian Fifty and One Hundred Pound notes were withdrawn from circulation in 1945.
No. Only the 1988 and 1989 Australian 2 Dollar coins have HH on them. HH is the initials of the designer (Horst Hahne) of the reverse side of the coin. All years of the Australian Two Dollar coin are potentially still in circulation and are therefore worth Two Dollars, unless they are Mint Uncirculated or Proof coins. The initials do not make the coin worth any more or less.
Marsupials were taken for food.
You may be referring to New York congresswoman Shirley Chisholm, and if you are, I actually worked on one of her campaigns. Dynamic and very impressive person, excellent speaker, and sad to say, not taken seriously as a candidate (she was a few years ahead of her time). But in a way, it's true that she was part of the process of both female candidates and candidates of color being taken more seriously, and eventually that did lead to successful campaigns such as President Obama's.