North Carolina pound

The North Carolina pound (symbol: £), commonly known as the pound, was the currency of North Carolina until 1793. Initially, the British pound circulated, supplemented from 1709 by local paper money and the introduction of Colonial currency and the Pound denominations in 1712.[1] Although these notes were denominated in pounds, shillings and pence, they were worth less than sterling, with 1 North Carolina shilling = 9 pence sterling. The first issue of paper money was known as "Old Tenor" money. In 1748, "New Tenor" paper money was introduced, worth 7½ times the Old Tenor notes.[2]

North Carolina pound
North Carolina £3 banknote (obverse)North Carolina £3 banknote (reverse)
Denominations
Pluralpounds
Symbol£
Banknotes
Freq. used£1, £2, £5
Rarely used£3
CoinsNone
Demographics
User(s)North Carolina
Issuance
Central bankNorth Carolina Treasury
Valuation
Pegged withpound sterling at par

The State of North Carolina issued Continental currency denominated in £sd and Spanish dollars, with 1 dollar = 8 shillings (the York rating). The continental currency was replaced by the U.S. dollar at a rate of 1000 continental dollars = 1 U.S. dollar.

Notes

  1. Newman, 2008, p. 313.
  2. Newman, 2008, p. 316.
gollark: ```Have: Dragon CaveWant: CB Gold```
gollark: One of these days probably nobody will buy DC.
gollark: Managed to trade for four new reds, yay!
gollark: Wouldn't the real problem be updating them all?
gollark: It's clear that the solution is a generalized programming language for describing group relations and automatically putting things into groups.Seriously, though, how would nested groups help?

References

  • Newman, Eric P. The Early Paper Money of America. 5th edition. Iola, Wisconsin: Krause Publications, 2008. ISBN 0-89689-326-X.
  • Cory Cutsail, Farley Grubb. 2018. The Paper Money of Colonial North Carolina, 1712-74: Reconstructing the Evidence. NBER paper.


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