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12 Cents Ohio Sales Tax Receipt

Issuer State of Ohio
Year
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Composition Paper
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Obverse lettering (LEFT):
VENDOR'S STUB
12
CENTS
(RIGHT):
12 (STATE SEAL) 12
CENTS CENTS
STATE OF OHIO
PREPAID
SALES TAX
CONSUMER'S
RECEIPT
COLUMBIAN BANK NOTE COMPANY
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Reverse lettering OHIO
SALES
TAX
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Comments

Ohio was among the earliest U.S. states to adopt a general sales tax, doing so in 1934, and these receipts were issued as physical proof of tax collected on small purchases — a system that required merchants to buy receipt books and issue them to customers at point of sale. The Columbian Bank Note Company, a Chicago-based security printer active through much of the early-to-mid twentieth century, handled production, accounting for the watermarked paper.

The 12-cent denomination reflects the tax collected on a specific purchase amount rather than a face-value currency figure — these circulated not as money but as fiscal vouchers, and most were discarded after use, which makes intact examples genuinely uncommon.

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