Colonial and Continental Currency:
A New Nation's Currency
The Colonial economy depended largely on foreign coins, barter, and commodity
money. In 1690, the Massachusetts Bay Colony issued the first Colonial
currency. Other colonies soon began to issue their own paper currency.
Usually denominated in Spanish Milled Dollars, Colonial notes were
also denominated in British shillings, pounds, and pence. In 1764,
the British declared Colonial currency illegal.
Beginning in 1775, the Continental Congress issued currency to finance
the Revolutionary War. These notes, called Continentals, had no backing
in gold or silver.
Continentals were backed by the "anticipation" of tax revenues. Easily
counterfeited and without solid backing, the notes quickly became devalued,
giving rise to the phrase "not worth a Continental." This brief period
marked the first time that U.S. currency's value was derived solely from
its purchasing power, as it is today.
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