Collectibles
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Item #7a -- $5 Louisiana Bond Note
Value: $100.00
Current Bid:
$15
1870 United States of America Bond of the State of Louisiana with Coupons.
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Item #7i -- 1 Constant
Value: $500
Current Bid: $75
In the 1970s, Ralph Borsodi and Robert Swann established a local, commodity-backed bartering currency in Exeter, New Hampshire called the Constant. The coin-like pieces, called Globes, were minted and sold in 1/2 ounce and 1 ounce .999 silver denominations.
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Item #7b -- 3 oz Silver Currier & Ives
Value: $200.00
Current Bid: $20
Limited Edition - Silver Currier & Ives 'Haying Time'. Small carving on one side (same as picture at left).
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Item #7c -- Bronze JFK Medal
Value: $99.00
Current Bid: $20
Medal composed of 19.8 grams of bronze commemorating John F. Kennedy. On reverse side, it reads "We shall pay any price, bear any burden, meet any hardship, oppose any foe, to assure the survival of liberty. 1/20/61"
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Item #7d -- 3-piece Silver Constitution Bicentennial Set
Value: $125.00
Current Bid: $50
1987 Bicentennial dollar, 1957 silver proof half dollar, and 1927 silver liberty quarter.
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Item #7e -- 1800s $10 Canal and Banking Company New Orleans Note
Value: $200
Current Bid: $50
This unsigned bank note was issued in the 1800s under the authority of the state of Louisiana. The note is in the amount of ten dollars and was intended to be issued from the Canal Bank located in New Orleans, Louisiana. The note reads: The New Orleans Canal & Banking Company will pay ten dollars to the bearer on demand. The note features a prominent building in the center of the note, the American Eagle on the left hand side, and a portrait of Liberty on the right encompassed by an oval that is made up of all the U.S. state names up to that time.
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Item #7f -- 2-piece Mass. $20.00 Note and Carolus 8 Reale Framed
Value: $400.00
Current Bid: $50
This great two piece lot features a Silver Reales and a Note set into a frame by Jeremiah himself.The set includes a Massachusetts Bay twenty dollar 1780 note that reads: The Possessor of this bill shall be paid two Spanish milled dollars by the Thirty fifth Day of December One Thousand Hundred and Eighty-six with Interest at the Rate of five per centum per annum fromt he State of Massachusetts-Bay according to an Act of Legislature of the said State of the Fifth Day of May 1780.The reverse of the note reads as follows : Printed by Hall and Sellers-The united States ensure the Payment of the within Bill and will draw Bills of Exchange for the Intereft annually if demanded according to a Resolution of Congress of the 18th of March 1780.The note comes with a Silver Carolus the Fourth 1793 8 Reales.The note was reedmable in Silver Reales because the American economy still relied on outside help for currency.The milled pillar dollar was enormously popular and circulated throughout the world even serving as legal currency in the United States until 1857
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