1901* $10 US Note Lewis-Clark/Bison Ch F-15 PMG (Fr#122*) Star
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Currency Highlights:
You can protect your newest investment against moisture during storage with these silica gel packets.
This denomination was one of the last of this type issued and has become a collector favorite. Add this classic to your cart today!
This $10 note would amount to roughly half a month's pay for a normal laborer in 1901. Common prices for staple food items during this period ranged from $0.15-$0.30 for foodstuffs and $0.70 for items like coal to heat homes. These notes represented a large sum of money for the average American and many of these notes would find their primary circulation in cities, with few moving to rural America for circulation.
An American bison is prominently featured front and center with portraits of explorers Lewis and Clark on either side. This Series 1901 $10 United States Note is very popular with collectors.
Currency Highlights:
- Last printed in the late 1920s and one of the last Red Seal $10 notes.
- Housed in an inert mylar currency sleeve from PMG.
- Certified by PMG as a Choice Fine-15.
- Star ★ Note.
- Face: Features the likeness of an American Bison at center flanked by the portraits of Meriwether Lewis and William Clark, famous explorers of the Louisiana Purchase in the early 19th century.
- Back: Displays the denomination at the borders with a likeness of Columbia flanked by pillars at center.
- Speelman/White signatures—Friedberg #122m.
You can protect your newest investment against moisture during storage with these silica gel packets.
This denomination was one of the last of this type issued and has become a collector favorite. Add this classic to your cart today!
This $10 note would amount to roughly half a month's pay for a normal laborer in 1901. Common prices for staple food items during this period ranged from $0.15-$0.30 for foodstuffs and $0.70 for items like coal to heat homes. These notes represented a large sum of money for the average American and many of these notes would find their primary circulation in cities, with few moving to rural America for circulation.
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