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Greysheet & CPG® PRICE GUIDE

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The Greysheet Catalog (GSID) of the Issue of November 29, 1775 series of Continental Currency in the U.S. Currency contains 8 distinct entries with CPG® values between $115.00 and $7,500.00.
$3,000,000 in Continental Currency payable in Spanish milled Dollars was authorized on Nov. 29, 1775. An additional $10,000 was approved on Jan. 6, 1776 to exchange for worn bills. The same style as the previous issue except that the denomination is placed under the emblem instead of at the end of the text. The Dec. 12, 1775 Resolution required the numbering to be different from the previous emission so all bills were numbered in bright red ink. Sheets for counterfeit detection were issued on blue paper.

Catalog Detail

  Issue of November 29, 1775 Value Range Favorite
Issue of November 29, 1775 Value Range  
Nov 29, 1775 $1 Continental Currency (Fr. CC11)
$165.00
-
$7,500
$165.00 - $7,500
Nov 29, 1775 $2 Continental Currency (Fr. CC12)
$165.00
-
$5,000
$165.00 - $5,000
Nov 29, 1775 $3 Continental Currency (Fr. CC13)
$130.00
-
$2,250
$130.00 - $2,250
Nov 29, 1775 $4 Continental Currency (Fr. CC14)
$115.00
-
$3,750
$115.00 - $3,750
Nov 29, 1775 $5 Continental Currency (Fr. CC15)
$115.00
-
$2,200
$115.00 - $2,200
Nov 29, 1775 $6 Continental Currency (Fr. CC16)
$115.00
-
$4,000
$115.00 - $4,000
Nov 29, 1775 $7 Continental Currency (Fr. CC17)
$115.00
-
$3,750
$115.00 - $3,750
Nov 29, 1775 $8 Continental Currency (Fr. CC18)
$115.00
-
$6,250
$115.00 - $6,250

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Greysheet Catalog Details

The Greysheet Catalog (GSID) of the Issue of November 29, 1775 series of Continental Currency in the U.S. Currency contains 8 distinct entries with CPG® values between $115.00 and $7,500.00.
$3,000,000 in Continental Currency payable in Spanish milled Dollars was authorized on Nov. 29, 1775. An additional $10,000 was approved on Jan. 6, 1776 to exchange for worn bills. The same style as the previous issue except that the denomination is placed under the emblem instead of at the end of the text. The Dec. 12, 1775 Resolution required the numbering to be different from the previous emission so all bills were numbered in bright red ink. Sheets for counterfeit detection were issued on blue paper.

Catalog Detail