Depictions of Slavery in Confederate and Southern States Currency
Original Acrylic on Canvas Paintings by


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Propaganda

Images on Southern currencies circulating throughout the country were designed to reinforce Southern convictions about the legitimacy of enslaved labor and to convince Northerners of its beneficial nature for Africans. Images were increasingly characterized by smiling workers and well dressed blacks in happy scenes. Note the painful hypocrisy in portraying a happy mother and child within a system that routinely separated families and sold children.

 

 

The Franklin G. Burroughs
Simeon B. Chapin Art Museum
3100 South Ocean Boulevard
Myrtle Beach, South Carolina

"Slave Boy"
Collection of Ronald O. and Mittie R. Smith
High Point, North Carolina



 

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State of Georgia  $1.00

To view additional bank notes where this vignette of "Slave Boy" was used, click on any note below.


State of Alabama


State of Alabama


State of North Carolina


State of Georgia


State of Georgia


State of Georgia


State of Georgia


State of Georgia


The Color of Money book (clothbound edition) includes a free CD-ROM
with images of hundreds of additional currencies that show depictions of slavery