How Did Pennies, Nickels, Dimes, Quarters, and Dollars Get Their Names? - YouTube

Channel: Today I Found Out

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Leigh H. asks: Why do we call pennies, nickels, and dimes those names?
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Prior to the United States minting their own coins, it relied on foreign currency.
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However, that all changed with the passing of the Coinage Act of 1792, which provided
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the framework for regulating money produced in the United States, as well as established
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the United States Mint.
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A little over a month after the passing of the Coinage Act, An Act to Provide for a Copper
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Coinage was signed into law and the first official U.S. minted currency was slated to
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be created.
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Among the forms of currency to make up the U.S. monetary system was the copper cent and
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the half cent, first minted in 1793.
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Besides being called by that name, the cent also retained the name penny, borrowed from
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the name for Britain's penny which had previously been commonly circulated in the country.
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As for the British penny, it got its name from the Old English penning, which in turn
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is thought to derive from the German pfennig.
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As for the nickel, this term has not always been the name for the United States' five-cent
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coin.
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You see, the half disme (pronounced like dime), as it was originally referred to, wasn't made
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of nickel.
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Like the ten-cent coin, the half dime was made of silver and weighed exactly half of
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the dime, hence half the value.
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During the Civil War, many metals were needed to support war efforts, resulting in the majority
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of coins going out of circulation, including the half dime.
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After the war, a new type of five-cent piece was introduced, one made of a copper and nickel
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alloy rather than silver.
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It wasn't until 1883, after intense lobbying efforts by industrialist Joseph Wharton, that
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the nickel alloy caught on, replacing the half dime and becoming widely circulated as
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the "nickel," named after the metal by which it was made.
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Moving on to the dime, this was technically the first coin made by the United States Mint,
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but using a borrowed coin machine four years before a Mint building was constructed.
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However, this dime, or disme as it was originally spelled, was not circulated and the first
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dime produced by the Mint to be used by the public wasn't produced until 1796.
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As for the name, dime ultimately derives from the Latin word "decimus," which means "one-tenth."
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The term disme was used by the French to indicate a monetary value of tenth, and eventually
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the 's' in the name for the coin was dropped to become dime.
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Following suit with the dime, the quarter, which was first produced by the Mint in 1796,
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received its name to indicate its monetary worth as a quarter of a dollar.
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This was a slightly unusual choice, as using a 1/5 denomination was more common in many
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currencies.
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However, at the time the Spanish dollar or peso (equal to 8 reales, thus "pieces of eight")
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was widely circulated in the United States.
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In large part due to this, and perhaps further thumbing their noses a bit at the British,
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the U.S. chose to design the U.S. dollar to duplicate the Spanish coins, in terms of matching
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the material and weight, hence value (at the time, the coins were made of silver and valued
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after the price of silver).
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Doing this allowed the U.S. coin to be exchanged for the widely circulated Spanish dollar in
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a 1 to 1 exchange, which was particularly beneficial for international trade and during
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the transition from foreign currencies to United States minted.
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(For instance, due to shortages of gold and silver, the U.S. was seamlessly able to extend
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legal tender status to the Spanish dollar in the late 18th century, something that wasn't
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taken away until the mid-19th century.)
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Thus, a 1/4 denomination was chosen, instead of a 1/5, to equal two Spanish reales, colloquially
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known as two-bits, hence why an alternate name for the quarter in the United States
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was two-bits.
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The name dollar derives from the word thaler which is an abbreviation for the word Joachimsthaler,
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a coin type made from silver mined near Joachimsthal (literally "Joachim's dale") in Bohemia, first
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minted in 1519.
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Eventually the mouthful of a name, Joachimsthaler, was shortened to just "thaler," and, most
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notably for the topic at hand, ultimately lent its name to the Spanish pieces of eight,
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also called the Spanish dollar.
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As the U.S. dollar was modeled after the pieces of eight, it was natural enough to borrow
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dollar from the colloquial name for the Spanish currency.
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As for how the dollar ultimately became known as a “buck”, one of the earliest references
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of this was in 1748, about 44 years before the first U.S. dollar was minted, where there
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is a reference to the exchange rate for a cask of whiskey traded to Native Americans
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being “5 bucks”, referring to deerskins.
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In yet another documented reference from 1748, Conrad Weiser, while traveling through present
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day Ohio, noted in his journal that someone had been “robbed of the value of 300 Bucks.”
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At this time, a buck skin was a common medium of exchange.
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There is also evidence that a “buck” didn’t simply mean one deerskin, but may have meant
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multiple skins, depending on quality.
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For instance, skins from deer killed in the winter were considered superior to those killed
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in the summer, due to the fur being thicker.
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It is thought that the highest quality skins were generally assigned a one to one value
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with one skin equaling one buck.
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In contrast, for lower quality skins, it might take several of them to be valued at a single
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buck.
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The specific value for given sets of skins was then set at trading.
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In addition, when the skin was from another animal, the number of skins required to equal
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a buck varied based on the animal and the quality of the skins.
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For instance, there is one documented trade where six high quality beaver skins or twelve
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high quality rabbit pelts each equaled one buck.
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This use of skins as a medium of exchange gradually died off over the next century as
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more and more Europeans moved in and built towns and cities.
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Once the U.S. dollar was officially introduced after the passing of the Coinage Act of 1792,
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it quickly became the leading item used as a medium of exchange, but the term “buck”
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stuck around and by the mid-nineteenth century was being used as a slang term for the dollar.
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Bonus Facts: Ever wonder where the expression “dollars
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to doughnuts” comes from?
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Well, wonder no more- "Dollars for doughnuts," or alternatively "dollars to doughnuts," meaning
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a "safe bet," or a "sure thing," seems to have first popped up, at least in its documented
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form, in a February 6, 1876 edition of the Daily Nevada State Journal:
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“Whenever you hear any resident of a community attempting to decry the local paper . . . it's
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dollars to doughnuts that such a person is either mad at the editor or is owing the office
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for subscription or advertising.”
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It again appeared in that same newspaper a little over a month later on March 11, 1876
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where it stated, "Several Benoites took advantage of the half fare tickets offered to those
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who were to attend the ball given by the railroad boys at Carson last night, and attended it.
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It’s dollars to doughnuts all enjoyed themselves."
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Given that the newspaper used the expression without explaining it or otherwise giving
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emphasis, it is likely the author felt that people would already be familiar with the
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phrase, so it had probably been around in slang for at least a few years up to this
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point, if not longer.
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As to why "dollars to doughnuts," beyond the alliterative qualities, it was essentially
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just a way to say you'd bet dollars to something mostly worthless, relative to the dollars,
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emphasizing how sure you are that you're correct.
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Going back to the 1840s, there was a very similar expression with the same basic meaning
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"dollars to dimes."
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Two other similar expressions also existed in the 1880s "dollars to dumplings" and "dollars
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to buttons."
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A couple decades later, "dollars to cobwebs" also popped up, but none of these had the
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staying power as "dollars to doughnuts."
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In all cases, the latter thing is the worthless item relative to the value of the dollars,
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but you're so sure about what you're saying, you'll happily bet your dollars to someone
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else's doughnuts over the matter.
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• The original face of the U.S. penny symbolized liberty in the form of a woman with flowing
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hair.
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It wasn’t until 1909 that this image was replaced with the bust of Abraham Lincoln
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to commemorate the fallen president's 100th birthday.
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• The Thomas Jefferson Nickels were first minted in 1938.
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The design for these five-cent pieces resulted from a contest held by the United States Mint,
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the reward being $1,000.
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Out of the 390 contestants, the winner with the best design was Felix Schlag, a German
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immigrant who had only been a United States citizen for nine years.
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As part of his design for the Jefferson nickel, Felix Schlag chose to depict Thomas Jefferson’s
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Virginia home, the Monticello.
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Jefferson designed the building himself and construction took 55 years to complete.
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• Unlike the design of the nickel, which was chosen as the result of a contest, the
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obverse design of the dime that we know today was an intentional act to honor President
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Franklin D. Roosevelt and his efforts with the National Foundation for Infantile Paralysis,
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or March of Dimes, which he established when he was stricken with polio in the 1920s.
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Wanting to do Roosevelt justice, engraver John R. Sinnock was granted the honor of designing
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the dime due to how he captured President Roosevelt on a previous medal he had worked
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on.
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• The original designs of the dime and quarter did not include ridges around the circumference.
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When the United States started minting coins, these two coins were among those made with
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the precious metals silver and gold.
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Individuals trying to beat the system for profit would file the edges off the coins,
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to later combine the metal dust to form additional coins.
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Even though these coins are now made with cheaper metals, the ridged circumferences
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are still used today.
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The quarter has 119 ridges and the dime has 118 ridges around its edge.
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• Not wanting even the smallest suggestion of a tyrannical mindset to be associated with
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his presidency, George Washington refused the honor of having his visage on U.S. currency.
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Later on, the tradition that was born out of this became an actual federal law, stating
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not only that living presidents could not be featured on money, but that a president
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had to be dead for at least two years before his portrait could be minted on U.S. currency.
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• The average life of most coins is 25 years, whereas, the lifespan for the average dollar
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is only 18 months, leading some to push hard for a switch from paper dollars to coins,
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with no real luck.
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When coins become too old and worn to be in circulation, the United States Mint recycles
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them and any usable metal from these coins is turned into coinage strips for new coins.