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Ultra Rare 1891 $1 Trteasury Note "Stanton Note" FR-352 Bruce-Roberts Grades vg, very good

Currency:USD Category:Coins & Paper Money Start Price:4.00 USD Estimated At:150.00 - 300.00 USD
Ultra Rare 1891 $1 Trteasury Note  Stanton Note  FR-352 Bruce-Roberts Grades vg, very good
Ultra Rare 1891 $1 Trteasury Note "Stanton Note" FR-352 Bruce-Roberts Grades vg, very good. Way out in the Wild, Wild West of the 19th century, folks liked carrying big Silver Dollars around in their pockets. But, back East, folks didn't. Their solution: Treasury Notes. When the Treasury Department purchased a dollar's worth of silver bullion, they gave the seller a $1 note that was redeemable at any time for silver or gold. It was literally a receipt. This satisfied the Easterners who could then carry the notes in their wallets. This 1891 $1 note features Lincoln's Secretary of War Edwin Stanton. It's one of the most intricately engraved notes, showing a red Treasury seal, serial numbers and three ornate patterns on the reverse. Compared to other types of notes, these were issued in small quantities (only as many as the silver the Treasury bought). And, because they were "as good as gold," they were a preferred means of exchange and circulated heavily. As a result, these Stanton Notes are very hard to find today. Edwin M Stanton is the bearded man on the left hand side of the bill. Edwin McMasters Stanton was an American lawyer and politician who served as Secretary of War under the Lincoln Administration during most of the American Civil War. Stanton's management helped organize the massive military resources of the North and guide the Union to victory