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Refunding Certificate

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The 1879 Refunding Certificate depictingBenjamin Franklin.

TheRefunding Certificatewas a type ofinterest-bearingbanknotethat theUnited States Treasuryissued in 1879. They issued it only in the$10denomination, depictingBenjamin Franklin.Their issuance reflects the end of a coin-hoarding period that began during theAmerican Civil War,and represented a return to public confidence in paper money.

When the Treasury issued the bonds,silvercoins were in wide circulation andgoldcoins were just beginning to appear atbanksnationwide. The Treasury paid out$40,012,750in notes, the majority—$39,398,110(or 98.5%)—in the fourth quarter of 1879, as long lines of people gathered at Post Office branches and Treasury offices. The Refunding Certificate originally promised to pay 4% annual interest inperpetuity.The obligation on these notes reads:

"This certifies that the sum of Ten Dollars has been deposited with the Treasurer of the United States under Act of February 26th, 1879 convertible with accrued interest at 4 per cent per annum into 4 per cent bonds of the United States issued under the Acts of July 14, 1870 and January 20, 1871 upon presentation at the office of the Treasurer of the U.S. in sums of$50.Or multiples thereof. "

However, in 1907,Congresspassed an act that ended the interest accrual of the certificates, and fixed the value of them at$21.30,over twice their face value. By January 1, 1885,[dubiousdiscuss]all but$260,000(99.4%) in face value had been redeemed, and since that time most others have met the same fate.

Consistent with the Treasury Department paper used in printing the Fourth and Fifth Issues ofFractional currency(1869–76), anti-counterfeiting devices of the period included embedding large silk fibers as well as the use of blue tinted paper.[1][2]

Only a few 1879 Refunding Certificates were imprinted with the inscriptionPayable to Order.Only two are known to still exist. Most were inscribedPayable to Bearerand even these are rare—only a few dozen are innumismaticcollections.

Footnotes

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  1. ^Kravitz, 2012, pp. 40–41.
  2. ^Blake, 1908, p. 39.

References

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  • Blake, George Herbert (1908).United States paper money.George H. Blake. p.32.
  • Kravitz, Robert J. (2012).A collector's guide to postage & fractional currency: The pocket change of the Union(2nd ed.). Coin & Currency Institute.ISBN978-087184-204-6.
  • Standard Catalog of United States Paper Money 17th edition published by Krause Publications
  • Official 2006 Blackbook Price Guide to United States Paper Money (38th edition)
  • The Official RED BOOK A Guide Book of United States Paper Money
  • Harry Bass Foundation