I'm irked that I didn't know about the recent discovery of this unique example of Franklin's anti-counterfeiting innovation of the nature print transfer block until MeadowviewCollector's post, but I stopped by the Library Company of Philadelphia today (founded by Franklin in 1731, and still active) to take a peek. The place is a treasure, and well worth the visit. Franklin's idea was that, however intricate a note's plate could be engraved, it was still engraved by the hand of man, and another man's hand could copy it. God's art, however, should be beyond the counterfeiter's artifice.
Two border blocks were also discovered, this from the 1760 Delaware two pound note:
And the three sage leaves, looking like they were picked yesterday, rather than 255 years ago:
I read about this in Benjamin Franklin: An American Life by Walter Isaacson, but these are the first images I've seen of his anticounterfeiting measures. Very cool to see. I must make it over to the other side of the Commonwealth to see this . . . and the mint as well.
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