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1864 $2 Keatinge & Ball, Columbia South Carolina -Obsolete Note - Scarce Issue!

Description: 1864 $2 Keatinge & Ball, Columbia South Carolina - Confederate States Obsolete Note - Scarce Civil War Era Issue! Signed & Issued Circulated Obsolete Note. Nice F/VF Example, no major problems or pinholes. Criswell Number: K-152. History Provided by Stack's Bowers: During the American Civil War, the Confederate States of America issued their own circulating paper money for use in daily commerce. Notes were produced in various types from 1861 to 1864. Due to the challenges of unstable supply lines, lack of reliability, military encroachment and other factors, the Confederate government employed numerous different firms for the production of Confederate treasury notes. Certainly the most prodigious producer of these notes was the firm of Leggett, Keatinge & Ball. In August of 1861 Edward Keatinge, an Englishman who worked as an engraver for the American Bank Note Company, relocated to Richmond, Virginia upon receiving an offer from the Confederate government to establish a printing firm. Keatinge partnered with Thomas Ball, a lawyer, who was invited by Confederate Treasury Secretary C.G. Memminger to join in the founding of the firm. Keatinge and Ball were joined in September 1861 by William Leggett (also formerly an employee of the American Bank Note Company) who specialized in lettering. With the firm ready to begin operations in Richmond, their first order of business was to produce desperately needed $5 and $10 bills. Quickly they altered a steel plate originally used on $5 notes for the Mechanics Savings Bank of Savannah, Georgia, removing the bank title and adding the required Confederate clauses and banner. The resulting product is now known as Confederate Type 32, a scarce 1861 dated $5 note. At the same time they produced a newly designed $10, now known as Type 24. Type 32 carried the printer’s imprint of Leggett, Keatinge & Ball Richmond, VA as did Type 24 for a while. In March 1862 Leggett was forced out of the company after Secretary Memminger’s accusation that Leggett had been associated with a Union spy. Keatinge & Ball continued with the company, removing Leggett’s name. After the Type 32 was printed, all later versions of the $5 denomination produced by Keatinge & Ball actually featured the portrait of Secretary Memminger. These include Types 33, 34, 53, 60 and 69. Due to the quality of their work Keatinge & Ball gained the bulk of the Confederate’s currency business by 1862 and from 1863 on produced all Confederate treasury notes except for the 50 cent denomination. The company induced skilled engravers from England to travel to the British West Indies and then be transported to Confederate ports aboard blockade runners, no doubt a harrowing journey. However the engravers were well paid, and in gold rather than paper currency. With supplies in the Confederate States scarce the company utilized contacts in the North and abroad to import much needed reams of paper for printing notes. Among these paper types were the famous "NY" countermarked paper as seen on Types 21 and 24. Other papers were imported by the Confederacy and used by Keatinge & Ball including "TEN" and "FIVE" watermarked paper, Hodgkinson & Co. Wookey Hole Mill, J Whatman 1862, J Green & Son 1862, and "CSA" block letter surrounded by wavy line watermarks. These paper types make up the numerous varieties available to be collected today. With the Union army approaching Richmond, Keatinge & Ball relocated their operation to Columbia, South Carolina in May 1862. Soon after Keatinge was the sole engraver of Confederate notes in denominations of $1 to $500. Ball ran the administrative side of the business and provided some of the firm’s financial backing. The company continued producing notes up through the Series of 1864 notes. In February of 1865 Keatinge quit the business after continued disagreements with the Confederate government and Keatinge & Ball was dissolved. Among possessions found in assassinated president Abraham Lincoln’s possessions on April 15, 1864, was a Type 69 Series of 1864 $5 Confederate treasury note produced by Keatinge & Ball. Please Check out Our Web Site : antebellumnumismatics. com where you can see many new purchases and other listings. Please reach out to us if you have any questions about any listings you see. *Combined Shipping Available ON ALL Items, Request an Invoice or we will send you one after one business day. Items over 16 oz. or $750 in value must be shipped Priority Mail with Signature Confirmation in order to be Fully Insured. Payment on all items is expected within Five Business Days to ensure a timely delivery. Please contact us directly if you need more than Five Business Days to send payment. BUYER is Responsible for ANY Import Fees or Customs, No Exceptions! ALL Precious Metals tested with our own Sigma Metalytics Precious Metal Tester and guaranteed genuine. We Offer A 30-Day No-Questions-Asked Return Policy on Most* items to all our customers! Please message us if you have any questions about our items and we are happy to answer them, as returns can be an inconvenience to both parties. The only exception is when items are damaged, tampered with, or removed from holders. All Bullion or Silver Sales are final as market conditions are constantly changing. Please check out our other listings! We have auctions almost every week so make sure to follow us! Follow our owner on Instagram as well at... antebellum.numismatics ... to see things we buy and are passionate about. At Antebellum Numismatics LLC we try to offer a wide variety of items including graded and ungraded coins from modern to bust series, paper currency, obsolete and confederate currency, exonumia such as civil war and hard times tokens, world coins such as thalers and numismatic medals, and we are always listing interesting items as well as many rare key dates. And many other interesting items like shipwreck recovered coins and Ancient coins. Feedback is crucial to us here on EBAY and we kindly ask you to contact us if there are any unforeseen issues before leaving negative feedback and we will be happy to resolve them with you. We pride ourselves on having outstanding customer service. Shipping is by USPS Ground Advantage/First Class unless package is Fragile or Over $750. All packages over $750 will be sent Priority Mail with Signature in order to be fully insured. Our Insurance Provider is Ship&Insure Inc. All orders will be filled in one business day and shipped out either same business day or the following. International Shipping is through Ebay's Global Shipping Program by default, which may get expensive in some foreign countries. International Shipping is also through USPS First Class International Package Service or Priority Mail depending on the value. If items are shipped internationally it is the Buyer's Responsibility to pay any import duties or taxes. Coin grading is subjective and all coins can be interpreted differently, so we try to post very large, up close shots of each item we list. And remember to buy the coin and not the holder! Be sure to take a close look and come up with your own opinion! All ungraded coins we offer are authentic and genuine as we ONLY buy from reputable dealers and shows, if there are any discrepancies, we are happy to address them and always offer our 30-Day return policy to all our buyers. We are a family-owned small business and appreciate your business and feedback.

Price: 189.95 USD

Location: Harvest, Alabama

End Time: 2024-12-14T00:26:00.000Z

Shipping Cost: 3.95 USD

Product Images

1864 $2 Keatinge & Ball, Columbia South Carolina -Obsolete Note - Scarce Issue!1864 $2 Keatinge & Ball, Columbia South Carolina -Obsolete Note - Scarce Issue!1864 $2 Keatinge & Ball, Columbia South Carolina -Obsolete Note - Scarce Issue!1864 $2 Keatinge & Ball, Columbia South Carolina -Obsolete Note - Scarce Issue!

Item Specifics

Return shipping will be paid by: Seller

All returns accepted: Returns Accepted

Item must be returned within: 30 Days

Refund will be given as: Money Back

Denomination: $2

Type: Banknotes

Grade: Ungraded

Country/Region of Manufacture: United States

Certification: Uncertified

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