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| 正面描述 | Green-tinted note issued by the State of Mississippi, dated November 1, 1862, with the overprint legend "Faith of the State Pledged" printed in red across the face. Two large Roman numeral X's are positioned centrally as denomination counters, flanking the principal text block. The note carries printed promise-to-pay text in letterpress, with spaces left for manuscript date completion, and states that the instrument is fundable in bonds bearing eight percent interest payable in ten years. |
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| 正面铭文 | TWENTY, Fundable in Bonds bearing Eight Per cent, payable in ten years, when not less than Five Hundred Dollars is presented. Receivable in payment of all dues to the State. THE STATE OF MISSISSIPPI promises to pay to Bearer TWENTY DOLLARS at the Treasury office. Issued ___________ day of ______________ 186 |
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Mississippi issued its own state currency in 1862 as the Confederate banking system fragmented and individual states scrambled to fill the void left by unreliable Confederate Treasury notes. The State of Mississippi issues were authorized by the legislature in Jackson and printed locally — a logistical necessity given wartime disruptions to established engraving firms in the North, now enemy territory, and the limited capacity of Southern printers.
Local printing meant cruder execution than pre-war bank issues. These notes are frequently encountered with uneven ink strike and rough cuts, which reflects production conditions rather than post-issue damage.