1 / 2

Beschreibung

John Morton Signed Currency Signer of the Declaration of Independence from Pennsylvania (1725-1777) who also chaired the committee that wrote the Articles of Confederation. Rare Colonial Pennsylvania engraved bank note for "Two Shillings and Six-pence," 3.25 x 3, issued as No. 31201, and reading: "According to an Act of General Assembly of Pennsylvania, passed in the Twelfth Year of the Reign of his Majesty George the Third. Dated the Third Day of April Anno Domini 1772." Signed at the conclusion by John Morton, and countersigned by John Sellers and Charles Humphreys. Printed in Philadelphia by David Hall and William Sellers, with reverse bearing the cautionary message: "To Counterfeit is Death." In fine condition, with the usual soiling from use.

144 
Los anzeigen
<
>

John Morton Signed Currency Signer of the Declaration of Independence from Pennsylvania (1725-1777) who also chaired the committee that wrote the Articles of Confederation. Rare Colonial Pennsylvania engraved bank note for "Two Shillings and Six-pence," 3.25 x 3, issued as No. 31201, and reading: "According to an Act of General Assembly of Pennsylvania, passed in the Twelfth Year of the Reign of his Majesty George the Third. Dated the Third Day of April Anno Domini 1772." Signed at the conclusion by John Morton, and countersigned by John Sellers and Charles Humphreys. Printed in Philadelphia by David Hall and William Sellers, with reverse bearing the cautionary message: "To Counterfeit is Death." In fine condition, with the usual soiling from use.

Schätzwert 600 - 800 USD
Startpreis 200 USD

* Zzgl. Aufgeld.
Siehe Auktionsbedingungen, um die Höhe des Aufgeldes zu berechnen.

Aufgeld: 25 %
Gebote in Abwesenheit abgeben

In der Auktion am Saturday 14 Sep - 18:00 (EDT)
amherst, États-Unis
RR Auction
+16037324284
Katalog ansehen Allgemeine Auktionsbedingungen ansehen Auktionsinformationen

Dies könnte Ihnen auch gefallen

Thomas Lynch, Jr. Signature - One of the Rarest Declaration Signers Signer of the Declaration of Independence from South Carolina (1749-1779); his father had served in the Continental Congress from 1775 to 1776 but had to return home due to illness. Thomas Lynch, Jr., was chosen to take his father's place in Congress, where he voted for and signed the Declaration. In 1779, he sailed to St. Eustatius in the West Indies, but his ship was lost at sea and never found. Exceedingly rare ink signature, "Lynch,” on an off-white 1.5 x .5 slip, expertly mounted within a custom-made 8.75 x 11 full morocco presentation folder along with engravings of Lynch and the signing of the Declaration of Independence, gilt-stamped on the front cover: "Thomas Lynch, Jr., One of the Rarest Signers of the Declaration of Independence." In fine condition. With the rise of autograph collecting in nineteenth-century America, one of the first areas of specialization was Signers of the Declaration of Independence. Apart from the Signers' central role in American history and the unusual significance of their autographs—after all, writing their names is what ensured their immortality—obtaining all 56 represented a goal that, with a little determination, could be achieved by a resourceful collector. It quickly became evident, however, that there were two notorious ‘stoppers’ among the Signers: Button Gwinnett and Thomas Lynch, Jr. It is not entirely clear who is rarer—while Gwinnett was generally thought to be the rarest of all signers, recent studies have proclaimed Lynch as the scarcer of the two. In either case, Lynch is certainly of the utmost rarity and is far and away one of the most desirable early American autographs.