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Part 5 of 8 · Colonial Coins

Continental Currency & Early Paper Money

By US Coin Shows · December 24, 2025 · 6 min read

Paper Money That Funded a Revolution

When the American colonies declared independence in 1776, they faced an immediate and critical problem: how to pay for a war against the world's most powerful military without the ability to levy taxes. The Continental Congress's answer was Continental Currency — paper money issued from 1775 through 1779 in enormous quantities to finance the Revolutionary War. This bold monetary experiment would ultimately fail through hyperinflation, giving the English language the phrase "not worth a Continental," but not before the paper money had served its essential purpose of funding American independence.

Continental Currency is among the most historically significant paper money ever produced. Each note was printed during the most consequential period in American history, authorized by the same Congress that declared independence, and circulated in the hands of soldiers, merchants, and ordinary citizens who were building a new nation. For collectors, Continental Currency offers affordable access to authentic Revolutionary War artifacts with direct connections to the Founding Fathers.

The Continental Currency Issues

Congress authorized multiple emissions of Continental Currency between 1775 and 1779:

  • May 10, 1775: The first emission — $3 million in denominations from $1 to $20. Printed by Hall & Sellers in Philadelphia.
  • November 29, 1775: Second emission — $3 million more
  • February 17, 1776: $4 million — notes from this date are among the most commonly encountered
  • May 9, 1776: $5 million
  • July 22, 1776: $5 million — issued just weeks after the Declaration of Independence
  • November 2, 1776: $5 million
  • February 26, 1777: $5 million
  • Multiple 1778-1779 emissions: Increasingly large amounts as inflation accelerated

By 1779, Congress had authorized over $241 million in Continental Currency — an astronomical sum backed by nothing more than the promise of future tax revenue from states that had no obligation to honor the commitment. The predictable result was catastrophic inflation.

Design and Printing

Continental Currency notes feature distinctive designs that combine nature printing (impressions of actual leaves pressed into the printing plates as an anti-counterfeiting measure), mottoes (many in Latin, attributed to Benjamin Franklin), and symbolic imagery representing the united colonies.

Notable design elements:

  • Nature printing on the reverse: Real leaf impressions created unique, nearly impossible-to-counterfeit patterns. This technique was pioneered by Franklin's printing firm.
  • Latin mottoes: "Exitus in Dubio Est" (The Outcome Is in Doubt), "Perseverando" (By Persevering), "Depressa Resurgit" (Having Been Depressed, It Rises Again) — expressing the uncertainty and determination of the revolutionary cause.
  • Circular border cuts: Intricate woodcut borders unique to each denomination served as additional anti-counterfeiting measures.
  • Signers: Each note was hand-signed by designated officials — some of whom also signed the Declaration of Independence.

The Hyperinflation Crisis

By 1779, Continental Currency had lost approximately 97% of its face value. A paper dollar that could buy goods worth a silver dollar in 1775 was worth about 2.5 cents by 1781. Several factors drove this collapse:

  • Overprinting: $241 million in paper money with no backing overwhelmed the economy
  • Counterfeiting: The British deliberately flooded the colonies with counterfeit Continentals to undermine the currency (an early form of economic warfare)
  • No taxing authority: Congress couldn't tax citizens to support the currency's value
  • Competing currencies: State-issued paper money, foreign coins, and barter all competed with Continentals

The hyperinflation experience profoundly influenced the Constitution's framers. Article I, Section 10 explicitly prohibits states from issuing paper money — a direct response to the Continental Currency disaster.

Collecting Continental Currency

Despite their eventual worthlessness as money, Continental Currency notes are highly collectible historical artifacts:

  • Common dates/denominations: $30-$150 in VG-Fine condition — remarkably affordable for genuine Revolutionary War artifacts
  • Scarcer emissions: $150-$500
  • Rare denominations or dates: $500-$5,000+
  • High denominations ($50-$80): Scarcer and more expensive
  • Counterfeit detection notes: Genuine notes with "COUNTERFEIT" stamped on them (identified fakes that were marked and returned to circulation) are collectible varieties

When buying Continental Currency at coin shows, examine notes for nature printing clarity (the leaf impressions should be visible), signature presence (notes without signatures may be remainders), and overall condition (tears, staining, and missing pieces reduce value significantly). Dealers specializing in early American material carry Continental Currency regularly, and Heritage Auctions includes them in their currency sales.

This guide is for educational purposes. Where official standards, grading services, organization memberships, or legal requirements apply, consult the primary authority named in the references below or the relevant government agency.

Reviewed on December 29, 2025 by the US Coin Shows editorial team. Editorial policy

Frequently Asked Questions

What is Continental Currency?

Paper money issued by the Continental Congress from 1775-1779 to finance the Revolutionary War. Over $241 million was printed, leading to catastrophic hyperinflation and the phrase 'not worth a Continental.' Despite this, the currency successfully funded American independence.

How much does Continental Currency cost?

Common dates and denominations cost $30-$150 in VG-Fine condition — remarkably affordable for genuine Revolutionary War artifacts. Scarcer emissions run $150-$500. Rare denominations or dates can reach $5,000+.

What is nature printing on Continental Currency?

Real leaf impressions were pressed into the printing plates as an anti-counterfeiting measure. Each leaf pattern was unique and nearly impossible to replicate. This technique, pioneered by Benjamin Franklin's printing firm, created distinctive reverse designs on Continental notes.