Section 9: Commerce in the colonies Previous | Next | Section Index
When coins were used, many came from New World mints
England did not supply the colonies with ample coinage and prohibited them from making their own. Foreign coins were used instead. Spanish silver dollars, worth eight reales, were called “pieces of eight” because they were often cut into eight bits for change. A quarter was “two bits.” These coins became such an important part of the colonial economies that the dollar was the logical choice as the basic monetary unit of the United States.
coin from Mexico City colonial New World mint
Mexico City
1769
coin from Mexico City colonial New World mint
Mexico City
1772
coin from Mexico City colonial New World mint
Mexico City
1807
coin from Bogota colonial New World mint
Bogotá
1812
coin from Bogota colonial New World mint
Bogotá
1820
coin from Bogota colonial New World mint
Bogotá
1841
coin from Lima colonial New World mint
Lima
1794
coin from Lima colonial New World mint
Lima
1818
coin from Lima colonial New World mint
Lima
1855
coin from Potosi colonial New World mint
Potosi
1802
coin from Potosi colonial New World mint
Potosi
1808
coin from Santiago colonial New World mint
Santiago
1812
Section Index