History at Your Fingertips
History at Your Fingertips
History at Your Fingertips
Since colonial times, our paper currency has undergone many changes, and its
evolution reflects the development of the United States from a land of independent farmers to
an interdependent, industrialized nation. In yet another way, our paper currency also mirrors
American history: the scenes and images depicted on the various types of bills provide
glimpses of moments in our nation's past and moods identified with the American people. The
panels "History at Your Finger-tips" and "Spirit of the Nation" show how various themes in
American history -such as the westward drive and the transportation revolution -are reflected
by the designs on paper currency. This pamphlet briefly describes the evolution of our paper
currency and then shows samples of more bills displayed at the Federal Reserve Bank of
Boston.
EVOLUTION OF PAPER CURRENCY
The first paper money in the new world was issued in 1690 by the General Court of the
Massachusetts Bay Colony to cover the expenses of an ill-fated military expedition into
French Canada. Since there was an extreme shortage of specie, or gold and silver coin, during
colonial times, all the other colonial governments soon began to issue their own paper
currency. Some of these early experiments with paper money were successful, but in many
cases, the bills could not be redeemed in specie as promised, and, as a result, they usually
depreciated rapidly.
To finance the Revolutionary War, the Continental Congress issued paper money known as
continental currency. Since the Congress had no power of taxation, all that backed these notes
was the "anticipation" of future tax revenues - a somewhat dubious prospect during the
middle of the war. In addition, the notes were crudely printed and thus easily counterfeited.
(Even the British turned to counterfeiting as a method of undermining the colonists'
resistance.) Most importantly, far too much continental currency was issued, causing it to
depreciate so rapidly that by the end of the war it had become virtually worthless.
As George Washington put it, "A wagonload of currency will hardly purchase a wagonload of
provisions."
The experience was so disastrous that it engendered a deep distrust of paper money issued by
the government - a distrust that was not overcome until the Civil War, when the federal gov-
ernment first issued paper money. During the years between the Revolution and the Civil War,
however, paper money did circulate - all of it issued by private banks chartered by the states.
One of the functions of banks is to create money by making loans. In doing so, banks provide
the credit essential to the growth of enterprise. When a bank makes a loan today, it creates a
checking account balance which the borrower then spends, thereby adding new money to the
total money supply. Before the Civil War, however, checking accounts were rare, and banks
made loans by issuing bank notes to the borrower which, when spent, became part of the
circulating medium of exchange.
The public's willingness to accept these state bank notes depended on people's confidence that
the issuing banks would redeem their notes at full face value in specie whenever the notes
were presented to the banks. Although some of the early banks were responsibly managed and
issued notes only if there was sufficient specie to back them, many others issued notes with
little or no hard cash behind them. For a time, some restraint was imposed on the state banks
by the First and Second Banks of the United States. These two banks, chartered by Congress
rather than any state, were forerunners of our modern central bank, the Federal Reserve
System. The First Bank was chartered from 1791 to 181 1, and the Second Bank from 1816
to 1836. While the two banks existed, they helped maintain the soundness of the circulating
paper by refusing to accept the notes of any state bank that did not have sufficient coverage.
Both banks, however, were unpopular with those segments of the population that wanted easy
credit (primarily the western, agrarian interests), and in 1832, Andrew Jackson vetoed the re-
charter of the Second Bank. For the next quarter century, America's banking was carried on
by a myriad of state-chartered banks with no federal regulation. A bewildering variety of notes
of all different sizes, denominations, and designs circulated. Many of these notes were not
accepted at full face value because the banks that issued them were unsound. To add to the
confusion, counterfeits were common.
The need to finance the Civil War sparked reform: In 1862, Congress authorized the first issue
of paper money by the U.S. Treasury. Called United States Notes, these bills were familiarly
known as greenbacks. In 1863, further reform came with the passage of the National Banking
Act, which established a uniform paper currency to be issued by new "national banks." These
banks, chartered by the federal government, were required to purchase U.S. government secu-
rities as backing for the uniform national currency they issued, called national bank notes. A
10 percent tax was placed on state bank notes, thereby tending to tax them out of existence.
The last series of national bank notes was printed in 1929.
During the years after the Civil War, the circulating paper medium consisted of not only na-
tional bank notes but also a variety of bills issued directly by the federal government. The
Treasury continued to issue the United States Notes as well as other types of currency such as
Silver Certificates and Gold Certificates. In 1913, another major change in our paper currency
occurred with the establishment of the Federal Reserve System, our central bank. Congress
authorized the Federal Reserve to issue Federal Reserve Notes, which constitute over 99
percent of the paper currency in circulation today. United States Notes, issued directly by the
Treasury in denominations of $100 only, make up the remaining fraction of today's currency.
Reproduced on the following pages are samples of the bills displayed in the panels "History at
Your Finger-tips" and "Spirit of the Nation." The bills are grouped according to the historical
themes their designs reflect.
Rev. 5/96
PUBLICATIONS
PUBLIC AND COMMUNITY AFFAIRS DEPARTMENT
P.O. Box 2076
BOSTON. MA 02106-2076