Pennsylvania Colonial Note Fr#PA-145 March 10, 1769 20s *Bettering House Money*

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The notes of the March 10, 1769 issue are known as “Bettering House Money” authorized by the February 18, 1769 Act for relief and employment of the poor in Philadelphia. The 4 highest denominations of the issue (including this 20 Shilling bill) have nature print reverse rather than blank. “To Counterfeit is Death” can also be seen on the reverse. Printed by Hall and Sellers. Interesting and scarce note for the price. Despite some splits, this example is incredible legible.

Signers: Luke Morris, Stephen Collins, James Penrose

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The notes of the March 10, 1769 issue are known as “Bettering House Money” authorized by the February 18, 1769 Act for relief and employment of the poor in Philadelphia. The 4 highest denominations of the issue (including this 20 Shilling bill) have nature print reverse rather than blank. “To Counterfeit is Death” can also be seen on the reverse. Printed by Hall and Sellers. Interesting and scarce note for the price. Despite some splits, this example is incredible legible.

Signers: Luke Morris, Stephen Collins, James Penrose

The notes of the March 10, 1769 issue are known as “Bettering House Money” authorized by the February 18, 1769 Act for relief and employment of the poor in Philadelphia. The 4 highest denominations of the issue (including this 20 Shilling bill) have nature print reverse rather than blank. “To Counterfeit is Death” can also be seen on the reverse. Printed by Hall and Sellers. Interesting and scarce note for the price. Despite some splits, this example is incredible legible.

Signers: Luke Morris, Stephen Collins, James Penrose

Date: March 10, 1769

Denomination: 20 Shillings

Friedberg #: PA-145

State: Pennsylvania

Certification: N/A

Grade: N/A

Comments: Splits, Trimmed