Antebellum Vermont Currency
Dublin Core
Title
Antebellum Vermont Currency
Subject
Currency, Antebellum America, Paper
Description
Currency is among a country's most deliberate forms of celebration. To associate certain images with tangible value is to idealize particular aspects of a nation, and these uncirculated bills from the Commercial Bank of Burlington are perfect examples of Antebellum (pre Civil War) American ideals. Notice the woman feeding the eagle, the prosperous farmers, the burgeoning indicators of industrialization. Similarly, the people represented on the bills reflect idealized values of human forms and dress for this period. Paper money from throughout the northern US bore similar emblems of patriotic progress, often reviving classical archetypes to demonstrate America's emergence as a republican utopia in the tradition of Greece and Rome. These banknotes, produced between 1858 and 1867, represent Burlington's participation in exemplifying this national ideal.
Creator
American Bank Note Company, contracted by the Commercial Bank of Burlington
Source
Mrs. Ernest E. Smith
Date
Between 1858 and 1867
Contributor
Jim Osborn
Format
Patent Stereotype Steel Plate
Language
English
Type
Paper Currency
Identifier
1936.89.7
Coverage
Burlington, Vermont
Still Image Item Type Metadata
Original Format
Paper Currency
Physical Dimensions
L - 30.5 cm ; W - 25.5 cm
About the Original Item
- Date Added
- May 3, 2011
- Collection
- Fleming Museum
- Item Type
- Paper Currency
- Tags
- Antebellum America, Currency, Image, Paper, Two dimensional, vermont
- Citation
- American Bank Note Company, contracted by the Commercial Bank of Burlington, “Antebellum Vermont Currency,” Omeka@CTL, accessed December 23, 2024, http://libraryexhibits.uvm.edu/omeka/items/show/608.
- Associated Files