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Colonial Currency, GEORGE CLYMER Signed, PA. June 18, 1764 FRANKLIN Printed Note

Currency:USD Category:Collectibles / Autographs Start Price:4,000.00 USD Estimated At:4,500.00 - 5,500.00 USD
Colonial Currency, GEORGE CLYMER Signed, PA. June 18, 1764 FRANKLIN Printed Note
Famous Signers on Colonial Currency
Important 1764 “Signer” GEORGE CLYMER Signed Note This Note Featured on History Channel’s “PAWN STARS”
GEORGE CLYMER (1739-1813). SIGNER of BOTH the Declaration of Independence and the United States Constitution from Pennsylvania, American Politician and Founding Father.
Province of Pennsylvania. June 18, 1764. Twenty Shillings. Plate B. Printed by BENJAMIN FRANKLIN Issue. About Very Fine. Fr. PA-125. Signed by Declaration of Independence and the United States Constitution “Signer” George Clymer in red. It is also Signed in deep brown by “G. Roberts,” also by “Jon(athan) Hughes, Jun.” This historically important Colonial note has a clean appearance with actual circulation wear and having some expert overall conservation and repairs to seal centerfold edge splits. The face side displaying a clear date, designs and has three full clear and readable signatures. One of the nicer quality examples that we know of and now available to collectors, bearing the rare signature of George Clymer written upon a note printed by Benjamin Franklin nicely signed in red by George Clymer as the middle signatory. His signature is very rare and is only found on this specific 1764 issue of Colonial Pennsylvania currency and is lacking in most all collections. We have only offered three notes with Clymer’s signature over the past two decades. The finest example of those was offered in our EAHA auction of August 27, 2005, Lot 573 graded Choice VF and it sold for $4,130. This current exact note was previously featured on the History Channel’s Television Show “PAWN STARS” in an episode which first aired in 2009.
George Clymer was born in Whiteville on March 16, 1739. He was an American Patriot and a leader in the demonstrations in Philadelphia resulting from the British Tea Act and the Stamp Act. He became a member of the Philadelphia Committee of Safety in 1773, and was elected to the Continental Congress 1776-1780. He served ably on several committees during his first Congressional term and was sent to inspect the Northern Army on behalf of Congress in the Fall of 1776.

When Congress fled Philadelphia in the face of Sir Henry Clinton's threatened occupation, George Clymer stayed behind, along with George Walton and Robert Morris. The British made a special point in destroying Clymer's country home in Chester County following the Battle of Brandywine.

He resigned from Congress in 1777, and in 1780 was elected to a seat in the Pennsylvania Legislature. In 1782, he was sent on a tour of the southern states in a vain attempt to get the legislatures to pay up on subscriptions due to the central government. He was reelected to the Pennsylvania legislature in 1784, and represented his state at the Constitutional Convention in 1787. He was elected to the First U.S. Congress in 1789. Clymer shared the responsibility of being Treasurer of the Continental Congress together with Michael Hillegas, who became the First Treasurer of the United States.

He was the First President of the Philadelphia Bank, and of the Pennsylvania Academy of Fine Arts, plus acting Vice-President of the Philadelphia Agricultural Society.

Clymer died on January 24, 1813, and was buried at the Friends Burying Ground in Trenton, New Jersey.