Originally Posted by
PscyclePath
As late as the middle of the 19th century, all currency was local... we didn't really go to a national paper currency ("greenbacks") until the Civil War, and as Mr. Silver can probably explain better, didn't really go to the current system ("federal reserve notes" in lieu of "silver certificates") until FDR came along in 1933 or a little later.
The antebellum economy operated on the barter system and a system of hard money......
At the conclusion of the Civil War, the Federal government stopped printing money to try to control inflation. There was so much of it in circulation anyway that it continued on its own momentum. .....Remember, it was a new thing in 1865 that the people in Boston and Philadelphia could use the same paper currency as the people in St. Louis and Chicago. It made the transacting of business so much easier that a national currency was immensely popular. Bank and Brokerage notes dried up quickly, and passed out of existence shortly after the war. The national currency system was here to stay....
Tom
a history buff in the non-biking side of life...