Gold, Silver, and Greenbacks
NOTE: Unlike current Federal Reserve notes—the United States' legal tender—previous U.S. currencies were backed by silver, gold, or the good faith of the government. Before the Civil War, only coin was legal U.S. tender. Banknotes—paper money—were issued by individual banks and were therefore not accepted across the entire country. Throughout the nineteenth century and into the mid-twentieth, gold and silver were used as backing for U.S. paper currency, along with government obligation and debt.
RELATED LINKS:
- The Gold Standard, Bretton Woods and Other Monetary Regimes: A Historical Appraisal
- EconEd: Currency and the Fed
- Following the Yellow Brick Road: How the United States Adopted the Gold Standard
- EconEd: The Free Silver Movement and Inflation
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[Free Silver Cartoons From Judge Weekly Magazine] , Entry 168, Box 18, Folder 6, Item 1
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Gold, SDR's, and Central Bank Swaps : Report, Together with Additional Views
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Internal Memo to Katz with Questions about the "Gold Standard" , Box 24, Folder 1
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The Pedigreed Gold System: a Good System, Why Spoil It? : Report
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Public Law 79-171, 79th Congress, H. R. 3314 , Box 17, Folder 1


