US Notes

State-Chartered Banknotes of the Free Banking Era: Minnesota, Wisconsin, and the Notes of the Upper Midwest

Before the National Banking Act standardized American currency, the Upper Midwest was awash in hundreds of privately issued state banknotes of wildly varying quality, security, and backing. This deep dive into Minnesota and Wisconsin Free Banking Era paper money reveals a fascinating world of frontier finance, depreciated ‘wildcat’ currency, and some of the most visually striking obsolete notes ever printed.

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Jackson’s Bank War: How One President’s Vendetta Reshaped American Paper Money in the 1830s

Andrew Jackson’s relentless campaign to destroy the Second Bank of the United States triggered a monetary crisis that transformed American paper currency forever. Understanding this pivotal decade helps collectors decode the chaotic, colorful, and historically rich banknotes that survived it.

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The Bank Suspension Crisis of 1837: How a Financial Catastrophe Shattered Faith in State-Chartered Banknotes Forever

When hundreds of American banks simultaneously suspended specie payments in May 1837, the nation’s patchwork currency system collapsed into chaos, leaving ordinary citizens holding worthless paper and sparking decades of monetary reform. Understanding this crisis is essential for collectors of obsolete banknotes, because it explains why so many pre-Civil War notes carry hidden stories of failure, fraud, and financial ruin.

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