3-Cent Bills and Other Fractional Currency Nobody Remembers
During the Civil War, coins vanished from circulation as Americans hoarded metal. The government responded with something unprecedented: paper money worth less than a dollar....
During the Civil War, coins vanished from circulation as Americans hoarded metal. The government responded with something unprecedented: paper money worth less than a dollar....
Between 1863 and 1935, over 14,000 American banks printed their own paper money. These National Bank Notes carry the names of issuing institutions—from major city...
When America’s currency was backed by gold sitting in Treasury vaults, Gold Certificates served as convenient substitutes for heavy coins. Today, these notes represent a...
For nearly a century, Americans could exchange paper money for actual silver coins at any bank. Silver Certificates represented real metal sitting in Treasury vaults—a...
The bills in your wallet are Federal Reserve Notes—the dominant form of American currency since 1914. Understanding these notes transforms them from mere spending money...
Before the Constitution, before the United States existed, American colonists printed paper money. Colonial currency represents the earliest American monetary experiments—note
Confederate currency tells the story of a nation that existed for just four years—from hopeful beginnings through increasingl
Collecting world banknotes opens doors that domestic currency cannot. Political upheaval, hyperinflation, regime changes, and c
American paper money history spans over 250 years, from desperate Revolutionary War financing to the sophisticated anti-counter
Somewhere in an estate sale, tucked in a forgotten drawer, sits a banknote worth more than the house itself. Rare banknotes hav