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JOHNSON
COUNTY IAGenWeb Project |
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This material is used with express
permission of the Iowa City Press Citizen and the author Bob Hibbs.
Keep coming back for more Postcard articles by local Historian Bob Hibbs.
Copyright 2003
By Bob Hibbs
for the Press-Citizen
http://www.press-citizen.com/
Saturday September 27, 2003
Saturday Postcard 213: Pioneer Money Problems

Graphic by Bob Hibbs
Coins like the Old Capitol 50-cent piece now make commerce easy. During pioneer times, Old Capitol builders and city workers
received wages in script. Barter was common. Silver dollars were cut into eight pieces called bits; thus two bits equaled a quarter.
Half a bit was worth 6¼ cents, the price of an Iowa Avenue ferry ride in 1840.
By Bob Hibbs
For the Press-Citizen
Iowa
City pioneers faced money problems every day, not just from being poor, but
from a lack of coins and paper money in circulation. Barter was common. The
merchant traded goods for a chicken later.
Uniform
federal currency didn’t exist until Iowa City banker Ezekiel Clark
recommended it to Abraham Lincoln’s treasury secretary Salmon P. Chase
during the Civil War. Clark thus became the father of the U.S. greenback
dollar bill.
During
the pioneer era, paper money called script was issued by banks everywhere –
except in Iowa for a time when it was outlawed by the first state constitution
since the practice was so corrupted by fraud.
A
St. Louis bank script denominated at $5 might be worthless if the bank no
longer existed, something that occurred regularly. The $5 script might be
worth a dollar or two when traded for goods; in other words, heavily
discounted.
Silver
dollars and foreign silver coins of like weight often were cut into eight
pieces to provide small coins for use in everyday commerce. The pieces were
called bits; thus two bits equaled a quarter. Also cut in even smaller pieces,
half a bit provided the 6¼ cents one needed to ride the ferry across the Iowa
River at Iowa Avenue or the other local landings in 1840.
If
a coin wasn’t available, the ferry master probably would grant credit toward
firewood, or for another wanted item. Short term credit to buy groceries –
or a winter’s grub stake – was a frequent occurrence.
A
group of Iowa City merchants banded together to issue 10¢, 20¢ and 50¢
notes for change, redeemable in merchandise at any of the stores, or in bank
currency when presented in amounts totaling $1.
Iowa
City was fortunate to have the territorial government in the person of Iowa
City founder Chauncey Swan issuing script to workmen for wages, and to
suppliers of materials used to build Old Capitol. Territorial script was
considered safe if it could be held long enough for future payment.
During
the national financial panic of 1857, Iowa City government issued script in
$1, $2, $3 and $5 denominations to pay for materials and wages.
It was redeemed at face value in 1862 and destroyed, except for samples
given the State Historical Society.
The
1857 panic was devastating in many of the same ways as was the Great
Depression of the 1930s. It halted most activity, even in the remote frontier
community of Iowa City.
Planned
construction of Old Brick was sidetracked as local Presbyterians were unable
to generate the resources necessary to undertake a project even though they
were homeless after loss of their building to fire in 1856. A cornerstone for
Old Brick was set in 1856, but it was 1865 before a building was produced and
dedicated.
The
panic coincided with the move of Iowa’s capital from Iowa City to Des
Moines, providing a double blow to the local economy. The University of Iowa,
nominally opened in 1855, was shut down in 1857 except for its high school
classes, and not reopened for good until 1860.
An
infant banking system came into being in 1858 with the opening of 15 offices
of the State Bank of Iowa, including one in Iowa City run by “father of the
greenback” Ezekiel Clark. The state required its banks to redeem their paper
notes in coin on demand; thus the phrase, “Good as gold.”
The
state banks in Iowa yielded to federal national banks during the later years
of the Civil War, finally alleviating the problems presented by lack of a
reliable currency in circulation, something taken for granted today.
Next
time a coin is slipped into a meter or machine, recall how grateful the Iowa
City area pioneer would have been just to have had one at all.
Next
Saturday:
Like ancient times, old building parts are recycled locally.
Bob Hibbs collects local postcards and researches history related to them.