The paper money of the Confederate States of America (1861β1865) reflects the entire arc of a nation at war with limited resources: improvised printing, collapsing supply chains, and an economy struggling to function under blockade. With no domestic steel-plate engraving industry and little access to secure paper, the Confederacy relied on a mix of lithographed designs, imported vignettes, modified pre-war plates, and emergency print runs executed under severe wartime constraints.
Early issues drew from existing Northern engravings and allegorical plates, while later notes were produced in Richmond and Columbia by firms such as Keatinge & Ball. As war pressure intensified, paper quality declined, ink consistency varied, and pink underprint designs were introduced to deter counterfeiting. The resulting series is one of the most visually recognizable paper-money families in American history β not for uniformity, but for its raw, adaptive character.
Confederate designs blended allegory and propaganda: artillery scenes, cavalry charges, commerce upon riverbanks, and portraits of Southern figures like Lucy Pickens. These vignettes were more than decoration β they were political statements meant to project stability during economic freefall and spiraling inflation. By 1864, the currencyβs value was deteriorating rapidly, yet its engraving remained ambitious and symbolically dense.
Specimens, proofs, and high-grade survivors from this period are scarce because most CSA notes circulated intensely and were redeemed or destroyed after the war. The items below highlight distinct printing phases β engraved vs lithographed notes, pink-underprint issues, and Richmond/Columbia variants β without repeating card-level detail. Use the filters above to explore the brief but extraordinarily rich paper-money history of the Confederacy.