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America at 250

Fri, Jul 10, 2026 09:00AM EDT
  2026-07-10 09:00:00 2026-07-10 09:00:00 America/New_York Fleischer's Auctions Fleischer's Auctions : America at 250 https://bid.fleischersauctions.com/auctions/fleischers-auctions/america-at-250-22027
A historic assortment of lots carefully curated to celebrate the 250th anniversary of American independence, bringing together significant artifacts, documents, and objects that illuminate the people, events, and ideals that shaped the nation’s founding and early development.
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Lot 100

[COLONIALY CURRENCY] 10 May 1780 $25 "Terra" North Carolina Note NC-191e

Estimate: $250 - $500
Starting Bid
$100

Bid Increments

Price Bid Increment
$0 $10
$100 $25
$300 $50
$1,000 $100
$2,000 $250
$5,000 $500
$10,000 $1,000
$50,000 $5,000

NC-191e. 10 May 1780 North Carolina $25 "Terra..." note. Printed [New Bern, North Carolina]: James Davis, 1780. Serial no. 10859. Signed by Jonathan Cooke and John Ashe. 3 3/8 x 2 7/16 in.

 

A Revolutionary War-era bill authorized by the Act of 10 May 1780, giving the government authority to issue currency. From a pivotal period of the war when colonies relied on state-issued currency to sustain wartime expenses. The Latin motto "Quid non virtute efficiendum" (What is not to be accomplished by Virtue) was one of six used on the $25 denomination to deter counterfeiting. 

 

The recto is signed by John Ashe (1725-1781), a prominent North Carolina politician and military officer. He served as a colonel in the North Carolina Militia during the French and Indian War (1754-1763). Elected to the North Carolina House of Burgesses in 1752, he was elevated to the Speaker of the House from 1762 to 1765. A vehement vocal opponent of the Stamp Act, he eventually became an enthusiastic Revolutionary.


After resigning his royal commission, he was elected colonel in the patriot militia in New Hanover County in 1775, leading his men to victory at Fort Johnston, where they destroyed the British Garrison. He went on to another American victory at the Battle of Moore's Creek Bridge on 27 February 1776. In May, he was commissioned as Brigadier General of militia in command of the Wilmington Brigade, where he constructed coastal defenses in the Cape Fear region. On 8 November 1778, Ashe was commissioned as North Carolina's first major general in command of the state militia. Under the command of Maj. General Benjamin Lincoln, he pursued British General Archibald Campbell. After a devastating route at the Battle of Brier Creek, he returned to Wilmington, where he actively suppressed Loyalist activity and served as the Treasurer of the Southern district of the Colony of North Carolina from 1777 to 1781. When Cornwallis occupied the town, he was taken as a prisoner of war and contracted smallpox. Although paroled, he died shortly after his release from captivity. 

 

References:

Bruce Hagen & Stuart Levine. Continental and Colonial Currency. 


Eric P. Newman. The Early Paper Money of America. 

 

[Currency, Tokens, Medals,  Numismia, Numismatics, Exonumia, Bonds, Coins, Banknotes] [American Revolutionary War, American Revolution, Founding Fathers, Declaration of Independence, Colonial America, George Washington, Thomas Jefferson, Alexander Hamilton, James Monroe] 

Slabbed and graded by Paper Money Guaranty (PMG) as "30 Very Fine". 

 

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