As early settlers moved into the Pittsburgh area, they brought with
them the money and accounting systems familiar to them. Some early Pittsburgh
notes refer to pence and shillings; these denominations came to America
with the British settlers. Other early notes are valued at 6-1/4 and 12-1/2
cents. These strange denominations were rooted in the centuries-old coinage
of Spain, which was in widespread circulation in the colonies.
For most of the colonial period, the area that would become Pittsburgh was a mere outpost in the western wilderness. The French had built Fort Duquesne at the forks of the Ohio in 1754. In 1758 they abandoned their Fort to the superior forces of General Forbes, and the British took command of Pittsburgh and the surrounding region.
The oldest surviving Pittsburgh account book is a ledger of George Allen, a trader who had been appointed Indian Agent in 1759. The entries for June of that year show that he did a brisk business, delivering kettles, knives, gun flints, shirts, and other items in exchange for raccoon and bear skins. The accounts were kept in pounds, shillings, and pence.
The earliest known Pittsburgh paper money is an issue of merchant scrip in 1775. The typeset bills were apparently a standard form made for general use by Pittsburgh merchants. One issue was signed by an Ignace Labate (see Figure 1). All are payable in "Pennsylvania Currency", meaning colonial paper money issued by the state of Pennsylvania. The scrip notes were issued in denominations of six pence, one shilling, and two shillings. In 1777, Joseph Sommerville issued a one shilling scrip note at Hannah's town, near Pittsburgh [Newman 76].
Despite Indian hostilities the town slowly grew. The first newspaper
was the Pittsburgh Gazette founded in 1786. Individual issues of the fortnightly
paper were priced at six pence and yearly subscriptions were available
at 17 shillings and sixpence. By 1794 Pittsburgh contained some 300 houses,
and the taxes collected amounted to 253 pounds, 19 shillings, and 9 pence
[Lorant 75], p64].
England placed heavy restrictions on the export of coins, and much of
the coinage in the colonies drifted back to England in payment for manufactured
goods. In fact, this "specie drainage" was one cause of the friction between
the Colonies and the Mother Country, which lead to the American Revolution
([Solomon 76], p25).
| Value | Leaft
Weight |
||||
| ¦. | s. | d. | dwt | gr | |
| Engl. Guineas at | 1 | 14 | 0 | 5 | 6 |
| French Guineas | 1 | 13 | 6 | 5 | 5 |
| Moidores | 2 | 3 | 6 | 6 | 18 |
| Johannes’s | 5 | 15 | 0 | 18 | 8 |
| Half Johannes’s | 2 | 17 | 6 | 9 | 4 |
| Carolines | 1 | 14 | 0 | 6 | 5 |
| Dutch of Ger. Ducat | 0 | 14 | 0 | 2 | 4 |
| French milled Piftoles | 1 | 6 | 6 | 4 | 4 |
| Spanish Piftoles | 1 | 7 | 0 | 4 | 6 |
| Arabian Chequins | 0 | 13 | 6 | 2 | 3 |
| Other Gold Coin, per ounce | 6 | 5 | 0 | - | - |
| French Silver Crowns | 0 | 7 | 6 | 17 | 6 |
| Spanifh milled Pieces | 0 | 7 | 6 | 17 | 6 |
| Other good coined Span.
Silver, per ounce |
0 | 8 | 6 | - | - |
The Spanish dollar was divided into eight rials or reals, usually written as "rialls" or "ryalls" in colonial records. The fractional coins were the four-real piece, the double real, the real, the half-real, and the quarter-real. ([Carothers 30], p25)
The Spanish dollar was so popular, and its use so widespread, that the
Founding Fathers based the new American Dollar directly on the circulating
Spanish standard. The following table gives the relative values and names
of the various fractions of the American and Spanish dollars.
|
|
|
|
|
|
| 100 | 8 | Peso | Pieces-of-Eight | Spanish Dollar |
| 50 | 4 | Four Real | Four Bits | Half Dollar |
| 25 | 2 | Double Real | Two Bits | Quarter |
| 12 1/2 | 1 | Real | Bit | |
| 6 1/4 | 1/2 | Half-Real | Half Bit | Medio, Picayune |
The origin of the term "two bits" is apparent from the table. The phase "not worth a picayune" came from the name of the smallest Spanish silver denomination. The table also makes clear the origins of the 6-1/4 and 12-1/2 cent denominations.
This mix of denominations in three different accounting systems led to other peculiar terms. Throughout the colonial period the real was valued at one shilling in New York. When the new national coinage system equated a real with 12-1/2 cents, the people persisted in referring to the denomination as a "shilling." A quarter dollar was known as "two shillings" long after the Spanish coins had disappeared from circulation ( [Carothers 30], p34). Figure 3 shows a colonial New York note valued at half a Spanish Milled Dollar or Four Shillings.
Decimal fractions came in very slowly, quotations taking such forms as $1-1/4, $3-5/8, $5-7/8.... ([Carothers 30], p 82)
Postal rates for the period 1816-1845 were 6-1/4, 12-1/2, and 18-3/4 cents for various distances ([Muscalus ??], p3). The Pittsburgh Intelligencer was 6-1/4 cents per copy in 1841 ([Carothers 30], p82).
Paper money denominations mimicked the coin denominations. After the
War of 1812, economic conditions forced silver and gold from circulation.
Throughout the country, paper issues appeared to fill the void. Notes for
6-1/4, 12-1/2, and 25 cents were common. A similar crisis in 1834 produced
another flurry of notes. Muscalus' monographs list many of these notes
([Muscalus 48, Muscalus ??]). Figure 4 shows a 6-1/4 cent note of the Farmer's
Bank of Virginia (1839), picturing a Spanish half-real coin. Table 3 lists
the known Pittsburgh notes in 6-1/4 and 12-1/2 cent denominations.
|
|
|
|
| 6-1/4 | 1815 | Bank of Pittsburgh |
| 6-1/4 | 1815 | Bank of Pittsburgh |
| 12-1/2 | 1815 | Borough of Pittsburgh |
| 6-1/4 | 1816 | Jonathan Boshart |
| 6-1/4 | 1837 | Farmer's & Mechanics Turnpike Company |
| 12-1/2 | 1837 | Free Admission News Room |
Figure 6 shows a 6-1/4 cent note of the Pittsburgh Farmers and Mechanics
Turnpike Road Company. The road built by this long-forgotten company is
now the present-day Fifth Avenue. At the time, the section from Grant Street
to Point Breeze was called Fourth Street Road [Rimmel 87].
These odd denominations still haunt us today. Nearly two hundred years
after the introduction of the decimal system of money in America, stock
quotations are still listed in terms of 1/8 dollars, a throwback to the
Spanish real or "bit". In Allegheny County, the 6-1/4 cent denomination
continues to puzzle workers in the Criminal Division of the Court of Common
Pleas. A rubber stamp, used daily, records a fine of 6-1/4 cents, assessed
to each prisoner at sentencing. The fine is no longer collected, but it
is duly recorded just the same [Smith 85].
[Hoober 85] Richard T. Hoober. Pennsylvania Obsolete Notes and Scrip. The Society of Paper Money Collectors, 1985.
[Lorant 75] Stefan Lorant. Pittsburgh, The Story of an American City. Authors Edition, Inc., 1975.
[Muscalus 48] Use of 6-1/4c and 12-1/2c Notes Prior to the 1860's. The
Nurmismatist 61(10):685-688, October, 1948. The
Numismatist is the official journal of the American Numismatic Association.
[Muscalus ??] John A. Mescalus, Ph.D. Paper Money of the 6-1/4 Cent and 12-1/2 Cent Denominations. Numismatic Scrapbook Magazine , 19??.
[Newman 76] Eric P. Newman The Early Paper Money of America. Western Publishing Co., Inc., 1976.
[Rimmel 87] William M. Rimmel <Regular column> Pittsburgh Post-Gazette, March 1987.
[Schilke 64] Oscar G. Schilke and Raphael E. Solomon America’s Foreign Coins The Coin and Currency Institute, 1964.
[Smith 85] Carole Patton Smith Few Can Make Sense of County Inmate Fine. Pittsburgh-Post Gazette, December, 1985.
[Solomon 76] Raphael E. Solomon. Foreign Specie Coins in the American Colonies. In Eric P. Newman and Richard G. Doty (editor), Studies on Money in Early America, chapter 4, pages 25-42. The American Numismatic Society, 1976.