4016

Republic of Texas $20 Note [161215]

Currency:USD Category:Coins & Paper Money Start Price:75.00 USD Estimated At:150.00 - 400.00 USD
Republic of Texas $20 Note [161215]
SOLD
300.00USD+ (75.00) buyer's premium + applicable fees & taxes.
This item SOLD at 2023 Jan 22 @ 08:35UTC-8 : PST/AKDT
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The Republic of Texas only existed for ten years, but issued their own paper currency. This $20 note appeared to have been issued Jany. 30, 1840.
A vignette of a Native American man standing over a dead bear appears in the upper-left corner of the note. The number '20' is printed beneath this vignette. A vignette of Liberty and a Native American man is printed towards the upper-right center of the note. Liberty is holding a liberty pole and cap in her right hand and is leaning against a shield bearing the flag of Texas; the Native American man is leaning against the other side of the shield. The number '20' is printed on either side of the vignette. A vignette of Wisdom is printed in the lower-right corner of the note. She is wearing a helmet, holding a weapon, and resting a foot upon a dead foe. The abbreviation 'No.' appears towards the upper center of the note; the number '3283' is handwritten adjacent to it. The plate designation 'A' appears under the note number. A seal of the Republic of Texas appears along the lower-center edge of the note. The month, day, and last two digits of the years are handwritten; the first two digits of the year, 18, are printed. The following two imprints appear along the bottom edge of the note: 'Rawdon, Wright, Hatch & Edson, New Orleans' and 'Rawdon, Wright & Hatch, New-York.'
The note is signed on the by James Harper Starr, Secretary of the Treasury, and Mirabeau Buonaparte Lamar, President. Starr, a Connecticut native, was a physician, secretary of the treasury during the Republic, president of the General Land Office's board of land commissioners, land agent, and later the founder of one of the first banks in Texas. Lamar was a soldier, the second president of the Republic, a representative of Nueces and San Patricio counties in the Second Texas Legislature, and the United States minister to Nicaragua and Costa Rica beginning in 1857 (

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State: Texas
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Provenance: Jim & Barbara Sherman Private Western Mining Museum