- U.S. Currency /
- Continental Currency /
- Issue of November 29, 1775 /
- Nov 29, 1775 $3 Continental Currency (Fr. CC13)
Nov 29, 1775 $3 Continental Currency (Fr. CC13)

Continental Currency November 29, 1775 $3 Fr. CC-13. PCGS Very Choice New 64PPQ....
Source: Heritage Auctions

Continental Currency November 29, 1775 $3 Fr. CC-13. PCGS Very Choice New 64PPQ....
Source: Heritage Auctions

Continental Currency November 29, 1775 $3 Fr. CC-13. PCGS Very Choice New 64PPQ....
Source: Heritage Auctions

Continental Currency November 29, 1775 $3 PCGS About New 53....
Source: HA

Continental Currency November 29, 1775 $3 PMG Extremely Fine 40 EPQ....
Source: HA

Continental Currency November 29, 1775 $3 PMG Choice About Unc 58 EPQ....
Source: HA

Continental Currency November 29, 1775 $3 PMG Very Fine 20....
Source: HA

Continental Currency November 29, 1775 $3 PMG Very Fine 20....
Source: HA

Continental Currency November 29, 1775 $3 PMG About Uncirculated 55....
Source: HA

Continental Currency November 29, 1775 $3 PMG About Uncirculated 55....
Source: HA

Continental Currency November 29, 1775 $3 PMG Very Fine 25....
Source: HA

Continental Currency November 29, 1775 $3 PMG Very Fine 25....
Source: HA

Continental Currency November 29, 1775 $3 Counterfeit Detector PMG Choice Uncirculated 63....
Source: HA

Continental Currency November 29, 1775 $3 Counterfeit Detector PMG Choice Uncirculated 63....
Source: HA

Continental Currency November 29, 1775 $3 PCGS Fine 15....
Source: HA

Continental Currency November 29, 1775 $3 PCGS Fine 15....
Source: HA

Continental Currency November 29, 1775 $3 PMG Choice About Unc 58 EPQ....
Source: HA

Continental Currency November 29, 1775 $3 PMG Choice About Unc 58 EPQ....
Source: HA

Continental Currency November 29, 1775 $3 PMG About Uncirculated 53....
Source: HA

Continental Currency November 29, 1775 $3 PMG About Uncirculated 53....
Source: HA




















Greysheet Catalog Details (GSID: 65309)
Continental currency was authorized on May 10, 1775 in a session of the Continental Congress and became the first federally issued paper money, predating the official birth of the United States by more than a full year. Continental currency is particularly historic because its issuance helped finance the American Revolution, which spanned from 1775 through 1783 and secured the United States as an independent nation. The notes were styled after Pennsylvania notes in use at that time and printed by Hall and Sellers in Philadelphia on thick rag paper with mica flakes and blue fibers manufactured by Ivy Mills in nearby Chester, Pennsylvania. The notes, which did not bear interest, were promises to pay the bearer and circulated alongside colonial paper currency issued by the individual colonies. While the notes promised payment to their bearers and were redeemed with the taxes collected by the individual colonies, the notes became virtually worthless after runaway inflation set in, causing many in the public to lose confidence in paper currency, giving rise to the phrase not worth a Continental. The dramatic devaluation of Continental currency did little to instill public confidence in paper currency, which the United States would not print again until the start of the Civil War in 1861.
Catalog Detail
GSID: | 65309 |
Coin Date: | Nov 29, 1775 |
Denomination: | $3 / Three dollars |
Variety: | Continental Currency |
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