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18th century currency
One-shilling note, issued in New Hampshire in 1776
Three-pound note, issued in New Hampshire in 1775
The
pound
was the currency of
New Hampshire
until 1793. Initially,
sterling coin
circulated, supplemented from 1709 by local paper money. These notes were denominated in
£sd
but were worth less than sterling, with 1 New Hampshire shilling = 9 pence sterling. This first issue of paper money was known as the "Old Tenor" issue.
In 1742, following depreciation of the Old Tenor notes, "New Tenor" notes were issued worth 4 times the Old tenor notes. These were replaced, in 1755, by the "Lawful Money" issue. These notes were initially equal to their face value in sterling and replaced the previous issues at the rates of 1 Lawful shilling = 3⅓ New Tenor shillings = 13⅓ Old Tenor shillings. The "Colonial" issue of paper money was introduced in 1763, worth 1⅓ times the Lawful Money notes.
The State of New Hampshire issued
Continental currency
denominated in £sd and
Spanish dollars
, with 1 dollar = 6 shillings. The continental currency was replaced by the
U.S. dollar
at a rate of 1000 continental dollars = 1 U.S. dollar.
Currency units named
pound
,
lira
, or similar
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Circulating
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Local alternative currency
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Defunct
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Historical antecedents (mass)
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See also
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