Coinage of the United States: A Short History Coinage of the United States: A Short History

Coinage of the United States: A Short History

    • $2.99
    • $2.99

Publisher Description

The history of United States coinage is a story that parallels the rise of America. Starting from a humble beginning in a basement in Philadelphia in the first few years of the country to grow to a large highly sophisticated system that produces millions of coins per year. Due to a lack of silver, the first silver coins produced by the Mint came from silverware contributed by George and Martha Washington. Coins are something we take for granted today and put in jars and baskets on our night stands to accumulate for a rainy day when we need a few extra dollars. For more than half of the history of America, that wouldn’t have been possible for the average citizen. It wasn’t until after the Civil War that coinage became widely used for all types of transactions. Up until this time, barter and money substitutes, such as, tokens, script, and foreign coins, were used as a mediums of exchange. During the 1830’s and then again during the Civil War, coins were in such short supply that merchants and private individuals took to producing cent sized coins just to make change for the day to day transactions. In America, it was legal up until 1857 to use foreign money in transactions. The Spanish dollars and their fractional parts called “bits” were very common during colonial times up until the mid-1800s.
President Theodore Roosevelt sparked a change in the designs on coins from a standardized institutional theme to more artistic and attractive designs. The President enlisted the help of one of the country’s most prominent sculptures to create some of the most beautiful coins in the history of the country and perhaps the entire world. Up until recent times, the value of the silver and gold coins depended on their intrinsic metal value. This was a constant headache for the Mint, as the value of gold and silver would rise, the coins would disappear from circulation to be melted and sold for their bullion value. It wasn’t up until 1964 that the Mint totally abandoned precious metals for the day-to-day coinage and changed the composition to what we see today as modern copper-nickel clad coinage.
Come and take the journey into what seems so ubiquitous today, and learn the fascinated history of these little metal objects in our pockets and purses.

GENRE
History
RELEASED
2015
October 29
LANGUAGE
EN
English
LENGTH
41
Pages
PUBLISHER
Doug West
SELLER
Draft2Digital, LLC
SIZE
535.3
KB

More Books Like This

History of the United States Mint and Its Coinage History of the United States Mint and Its Coinage
2006
Coins of the World Coins of the World
2012
Gold and the Gold Standard Gold and the Gold Standard
2018
The Essential Guide to Investing in Precious Metals The Essential Guide to Investing in Precious Metals
2011
Gold and the Gold Standard Gold and the Gold Standard
2011
Profitable Coin Collecting Profitable Coin Collecting
2008

More Books by Doug West

Buying and Selling Silver Bullion Like a Pro Buying and Selling Silver Bullion Like a Pro
2014
A Short Biography of the Scientist Sir Isaac Newton A Short Biography of the Scientist Sir Isaac Newton
2015
Jesse Owens, Adolf Hitler and the 1936 Summer Olympics Jesse Owens, Adolf Hitler and the 1936 Summer Olympics
2016
The History of the Jamestown Colony: America’s First Permanent English Settlement The History of the Jamestown Colony: America’s First Permanent English Settlement
2020
President George H. W. Bush: A Short Biography President George H. W. Bush: A Short Biography
2017
John Adams: A Short Biography John Adams: A Short Biography
2015