- Pennsylvania pound
The pound was the
currency ofPennsylvania until 1793. Initially, theBritish pound and certain foreign coins circulated, supplemented from 1723 by local paper money, calledColonial Scrip . Although these notes were denominated in pounds,shilling s and pence, they were worth less than sterling, with 1 Pennsylvanian shilling = 9 pence sterling.In March 1723, it issued
Colonial Scrip , paper bills of credit to the amount of $60,000, made them a legal tender in all payments on pain of confiscating the debt or forfeiting thecommodity , imposed sufficient penalties on all persons who presumed to make any bargain or sale on cheaper terms in case of being paid ingold orsilver , and provided for the gradual reduction of the bills by enacting that one-eighth of the , as well as the wholeinterest , should be paid annually. Pennsylvania made noloan s but on landsecurity or plate deposited in the loan office, and obliged borrowers to pay 5 % for the sums they took up. The scheme worked so well that, in the latter end of the year, thegovernment emitted bills to the amount of $150,000 on the same terms. In1729 there was a new emission of $150,000 to be reduced one-sixteenth a year. Pennsylvania was one of the last – if not the very last – colonies that emitted a paper currency. In 1775, the Colonial "Scrip" currency was replaced byContinental currency . The Commonwealth of Pennsylvania issuedContinental currency denominated in £sd andSpanish dollar s, with 1 dollar = 7 shillings 6 pence. The continental currency was replaced by theU.S. dollar at a rate of 1000 continental dollars = 1 U.S. dollar in 1793.
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