Coins

The Early Dime Coinage, To 1807

In 2019 we think of the dime as merely something with which to make change but this was not always true. Going back a hundred years or more the dime was an important coin with real buying power. Going back even further, the average unskilled worker in the 1790s, for example, rarely earned more than 75 cents for a twelve-hour day of hard physical labor. Although the dime was an important coin, it was in fact not widely seen in the marketplaces of the United States until after 1820. The reason was that the Spanish one-real silver coin, worth twelve and one-half cents in U.S. money, was heavily used throughout the early days of the Republic. And therein lies a tale.

The first attempts at a national system of money for the United States came in the early 1780s when Robert Morris devised a scheme for a decimal coinage. This plan failed for technical reasons but the idea bore fruit and in 1784–1785 Thomas Jefferson, then a member of the Confederation Congress, studied the problem very carefully and also came up with a decimal system, but based on the Spanish silver dollar (eight reales). One of his suggestions was for the coinage of a tenth of a dollar, or dime. He wrote that “The tenth will be precisely the Spanish bit, or half pistareen

You’re reading a preview, subscribe to read more.

More from Coins

Coins2 min read
Dealers Report Brisk Bullion Sales
Momentum is the key word describing the health of the market for coins. Coin shows, auctions and clubs are all well attended. Several major conventions held during the early part of 2023 have all reported strong sales for virtually anything, be it bu
Coins6 min read
Reassembling Proof Sets – the Challenge
One of the truly fun aspects of collecting is getting our hands on the best possible coins we can. For the past few decades, this means proof coins and proof sets. The United States Mint is one of the world leaders in producing gorgeous proof sets e
Coins6 min read
From Gods to Commoners – the Faces on Coins
THE EARLIEST coins we know of in the West come from what today is Turkey. They were made from placer nuggets of gold or silver, or a naturally occurring alloy of the two called ‘electrum,’ all of which could be pulled from the rivers and streams of t

Related Books & Audiobooks