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Continental Dollar 1776
In July, 1776 the American Revolution had entered
its second, decisive year. The shooting at Lexington and Concord and George
Washington’s appointment as commander in chief of the Continental Army were a
year past. The British had unexpectedly evacuated occupied Boston, and both
commander and army were enjoying an all-too-brief season of success.
Sitting since May 1775, the Second Continental Congress
had moved from attempted conciliation
with the British Crown to a forthright vote for Independence on July 2,
1776. On July 4 the first hardy delegates signed the momentous document
which declared that the 13 former colonies “were and by right ought to
be free and independent states.”
Loosely united even in the midst of war, the new states
had no unity whatever in coinage and currency. Each began printing its own
paper currency valued both in British-style pounds, shillings and pence and in
the universally familiar Spanish Milled dollar. The states valued the Spanish
dollar at wildly different rates ranging from eight shillings in New York to 32
shillings sixpence in South Carolina. In the first flush of independence,
Congress apparently decided to express America’s sovereignty by launching a
distinctive new coinage, known to numismatists as the Continental Dollar.
Sometime in July 1776, most probably in New York City, these coins were struck
in silver, brass and pewter. More than 60 survive today, of which the larger
number are pewter.
The coins’ distinctively American designs are attributed
to philosopher, almanac writer and statesman Benjamin Franklin. The obverse
bears a sundial with the Franklin-esque
Latin motto FUGIO, “I (Time) Fly,” coupled with an English admonition
MIND YOUR BUSINESS below. The legend CONTINENTAL CURRENCY and bold date
1776 appear within the outer beaded border. The reverse presents 13 continuous
links, each bearing a state name or abbreviation from
N’HAMP’S to VIRGINIA. At the center, AMERICAN CONGRESS surrounds the hopeful
motto WE ARE ONE.
Noted numismatic scholar Eric P. Newman published a
definitive study of the Continental coins in 1952, noting the major obverse
types with their charming variety of spellings, CURENCY, CURRENCY and
CURRENCEY. All show FUGIO between two solid concentric lines, but the most fascinating
coins have an added engraver’s “signature,” EG FECIT.
Numismatists generally agree that “EG” was Elisha
Gallaudet, an experienced bank note engraver of Freehold, New Jersey. Gallaudet
was very familiar with the Continental Dollar design, since he had engraved the
same symbols on the One Sixth Dollar Continental Currency notes of Feb. 17,
1776, including sun dial, FUGIO and links. FECIT, Latin for MADE IT, was a
widely used identification familiar to collectors of contemporary European
coins and medals. Researchers believe that Gallaudet simply adapted his paper
money design to the proposed new coins at the invitation of Congress, probably
during the heady days of July 1776 when massive French loans were expected to
provide the necessary silver for a new national coinage.
The July 1776 through September 1778 series of
Continental Currency printed by Franklin’s old firm of Hall & Sellers
omitted the one-dollar bill, and New York State’s August 1776 currency series
also skips over this then-handy denomination. This empty niche was almost
certainly to have been filled by the proposed new silver coin. Study of 1776
New York and Philadelphia newspaper reports leads researchers to believe that
the brass coins were intended to circulate not as dollars but as pence, to
augment and replace the wide variety of assorted coppers then in use.
The silver and brass pieces may have been planned as
dollars and pennies, but the purpose of the pewter coins is less clear. They
may have been struck as an emergency measure after the lack of bullion
prevented a silver coinage. With the need for brass in cannon-making
eliminating that alloy, pewter would have been the next logical coinage
material. Pewter was used everywhere for household utensils including
tableware. Less critical for weapon-making, tin-based pewter would have made an
acceptable emergency money. Virtually any metal would have made a desirable
alternative for unsecured Continental paper, which rapidly lost its value with
the onset of the chain of military disasters that nearly swamped Washing-ton’s
forces later in 1776.
American defeat in the battle of Long Island was
followed by British occupation of New York City. Continued American retreats
led ultimately to the loss of New Jersey, the fall of Philadelphia and the
dreadful winter at Valley Forge. By late 1777, the prestige of Congress and the
value of its paper currency were nearly gone, and the concept of a metallic
Continental coinage receded like a mirage.
A favorite with collectors of Early American
coinage, Continental dollars are sometimes included in advanced type
collections as an example of the first U.S. dollar coin. Obviously seeing some
use in commerce, surviving pewter and brass specimens range in grade from Very
Fine to Uncirculated, while the silver pieces also show varying degrees of
circulation. High points on both sides of the coin are the rings, which show
the first traces of wear.
An assortment of restrikes exist, the first being
made for the 1876 Centennial celebration, with additional strikings taking
place over the years. Porous cast counterfeits abound, making expert
authentication a necessity, particularly for lower grade pieces. All the issues
do not conform to any true standard, varying both in weight and diameter.
Ultimately the new United States won the protracted
war, but the first federally authorized coinage was not to appear until 1787.
This took the form of copper cents bearing (of all things!) a radiant sun over
a sun dial with the mottos FUGIO and MIND YOUR BUSINESS, and with 13 links and
WE ARE ONE on the reverse. After 11 years, Gallaudet’s designs at last came
into their own.
SPECIFICATIONS:
Diameter: 37.7-40.7 millimeters (varies)
Weight: 15.03-18.51 grams (varies)
Composition: Pewter (.950+ tin and lead, .050 trace
elements)
Edge: Twin leaf ornamentation.
BIBLIOGRAPHY:
Alexander, David T., and DeLorey, Thomas K., Coin
World Comprehensive Catalog & Encyclopedia of United States Coins, World
Almanac-Pharos Books, New York, 1990.
Breen, Walter, Walter Breen’s Complete Encyclopedia
of U.S. and Colonial Coins, Doubleday/FCI, New York, 1988.
Hodder, Michael J., “The Continental Currency
Coinage of 1776, a Trial Die and Metallic Emission Sequence”, The American
Numismatic Association Centennial Anthology, Colorado Springs, CO., 1991.
Mossman, Philip L., Money of the American Colonies
and Confederation, a Numismatic, Economic & Historical Correlation,
American Numismatic Society, New York, 1993.
Newman, Eric P., The 1776 Continental Currency
Coinage-Varieties of the Fugio Cent, Wayte Raymond Inc., New York, 1952.
Coin Stories and Photo's are courtesy Numismatic Guarantee Corp. (NGC) and are used with permission.
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