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100 Gourdes

Issuer République d'Haïti (Treasury)
Year 1827
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Shape Rectangular
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Obverse lettering RÉPUBLIQUE D'HAÏTI
Liberté
Egalité
$100.
CENT GOURDES
Vu : Pour le Secrétaire d'État des finances et du Commerce,
Vu : Pour le Président de la Chambre des Comptes,
Vu : Pour le Trésorier Général,
Le présent Billet circulera dans la République pour la valeur de CENT GOURDES, en vertu de la loi du 16 Avril 1827, et le Trésor public garantit la valeur de cette somme au porteur du présent.
Reverse description The reverse is essentially blank, showing only the faint embossed impression of the obverse design visible through the thin paper stock, with no printed text or imagery.
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Comments

Haiti's 1827 100 Gourdes note was issued under President Jean-Pierre Boyer, whose administration was simultaneously managing the catastrophic indemnity payments to France — 150 million francs demanded by Charles X in exchange for diplomatic recognition. Boyer had agreed to those terms in 1825, and domestic treasury paper of this period exists largely because the national coffers were being systematically drained to service that debt. The gourde had been under severe pressure since independence, and government-issued paper carried little public confidence.

Paper money from Boyer's treasury is extraordinarily rare today. Most surviving institutional records from this period were destroyed in subsequent political upheavals, making provenance nearly impossible to establish with certainty.