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| Issuer | Farmers Bank of Bucks County |
|---|---|
| Year | 1841 |
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| Value | 1 Dollar (1 USD) |
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| Obverse description | Log in to see details |
|---|---|
| Obverse lettering | BRISTOL PA. June 18th 1841 ONE ONE THE FARMERS BANK OF BUCKS COUNTY Will pay ONE DOLLAR to bearer on demand as directed by the ACT of assembly of the 4th May 1841 Cash! Pres! |
| Reverse description | The reverse is unprinted plain paper, heavily aged and toned, with manuscript endorsements applied in ink and a partial stamped or printed notation visible in the right portion of the note, oriented vertically. |
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| Comments |
The Farmers Bank of Bucks County was chartered in Doylestown, Pennsylvania, and operated during a period when free banking statutes and wildcat tendencies made Pennsylvania's rural note-issuing institutions objects of genuine public suspicion. This 1841 date places the note squarely in the turbulent aftermath of the Panic of 1837, when specie payments had only recently resumed and public confidence in small-bank paper remained fragile.
Bucks County issuers were not among the more notorious suspension cases, but counterfeiting of Pennsylvania small-denomination rural notes was endemic by the 1840s — detection guides of the period regularly listed Farmers Bank of Bucks County issues among those requiring close scrutiny.