North Carolina Colonial Note Fr#NC-112 July 14, 1760 3P PMG 45 *Finest Known*
The notes from this July 14, 1760 North Carolina issue were minimalistic with typeset and ornamental border design. “Death to Counterfeit” can be seen on the left, right, and bottom edges of this early bill. Only 1,000 of these 3 Pound notes were originally printed, which is the highest denomination of the series. There are a few contemporary endorsements on the reverse. Incredible eye appeal on this XF+ example with clean light paper and bold ink. This is the finest known example of the 3 Pound note, TOP POP.
Signers: John Starkey, John Swann, Samuel Swann, Lewis De Rosset
The notes from this July 14, 1760 North Carolina issue were minimalistic with typeset and ornamental border design. “Death to Counterfeit” can be seen on the left, right, and bottom edges of this early bill. Only 1,000 of these 3 Pound notes were originally printed, which is the highest denomination of the series. There are a few contemporary endorsements on the reverse. Incredible eye appeal on this XF+ example with clean light paper and bold ink. This is the finest known example of the 3 Pound note, TOP POP.
Signers: John Starkey, John Swann, Samuel Swann, Lewis De Rosset
The notes from this July 14, 1760 North Carolina issue were minimalistic with typeset and ornamental border design. “Death to Counterfeit” can be seen on the left, right, and bottom edges of this early bill. Only 1,000 of these 3 Pound notes were originally printed, which is the highest denomination of the series. There are a few contemporary endorsements on the reverse. Incredible eye appeal on this XF+ example with clean light paper and bold ink. This is the finest known example of the 3 Pound note, TOP POP.
Signers: John Starkey, John Swann, Samuel Swann, Lewis De Rosset
Date: July 14, 1760
Denomination: 3 Pounds
Friedberg #: NC-112
State: North Carolina
Certification: PMG
Grade: 45
Comments: “Split”