Specializing in Authentic Civil War Artifacts
  • South Carolina Fractional Currencies

    $450.00
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    South Carolina Fractional Currencies - Inventory Number:  CON 549

    Both the Union and the Confederacy had to resort to creative efforts to finance the heavy expenses of the Civil War. Both taxed their citizens. That was not enough, and both governments resorted to the printing of paper money that was, in effect, a long-term note promising the person who accepted it that its value would be honored by the government that issued it, and that ultimately it could be exchanged for actual bullion, or coin. In the South, this Confederate money lost all its value when the government that printed it was defeated. In the North, the "Greenbacks" issued to finance the war were gradually removed from circulation by a fiscally conservative Congress and inspired briefly a political movement known as the "Greenback Movement," supported by farmers and others who wanted a more flexible money supply. During the war, South Carolina and the Confederacy were also hampered by the shortage of metals from which to produce coins of small values needed for everyday exchanges. The result was the printing of currency in very small denominations, such as this February 1, 1863, issued uncut sheet of eight original hand-signed and numbered notes featuring three South Carolina Palmetto tree and assorted fractional currencies: 5/10/15/50 cent notes. 

    Frame measures 19 ½” x 14”

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    Inventory Number:  CON 549