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10 Pesos Tesorería General del Estado 1913

Issuer Tesorería General del Estado de Chihuahua
Year 1913
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Printer Imprenta del Gobierno de Chihuahua
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Obverse lettering SERIE B. Nº [serial] Nº [serial]
TESORERIA GENERAL DEL ESTADO
EL PRESENTE ES VALIDO, AL PORTADOR, POR
DIEZ=$10=PESOS
CHIHUAHUA, 10 DE DICIEMBRE 1913
Gobernador Provisional del Estado,
Gral. Francisco Villa
Tesorero General del Estado [signature]
Interventor [signature]
IMP. DEL GOBIERNO CHIH.
(Translation: SERIE B. No. [serial] No. [serial] / GENERAL STATE TREASURY / THE PRESENT IS VALID, TO THE BEARER, FOR / TEN=$10=PESOS / CHIHUAHUA, DECEMBER 10, 1913 / Provisional Governor of the State, / Gen. Francisco Villa / General State Treasurer [signature] / Comptroller [signature] / Chihuahua Government Printer)
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Protection description Circular validation seal of the Tesorería General del Estado de Chihuahua applied in brown-purple ink on the reverse, incorporating the state eagle arms.
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Comments

Chihuahua's state treasury was printing its own emergency currency in 1913 because it had to — the federal banking system had effectively collapsed under the pressures of the Revolution, and Villa's División del Norte controlled enough of the north that local scrip carried real practical authority. The Imprenta del Gobierno de Chihuahua was a government printing office, not a specialized security printer, which is exactly what it looks like: the official stamp was doing heavy lifting that a purpose-built note would have handled through intaglio and watermarked paper.

S555 is one of several Chihuahua state issues from this period that circulated alongside Villista military currency, creating a genuinely chaotic local monetary environment.

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