The New "Crime" of Silver: Who?s Guilty? ? Producers Hold They Should Receive the Monetary Price, $1.29; Consumers Argue for Free Open Market as an Industrial Metal ? The Producers? Side

The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers
Pat McCarran
Organization:
The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers
Pages:
5
File Size:
677 KB
Publication Date:
Jan 1, 1947

Abstract

WHEN this Government was founded, the framers of the Constitution wrote into that instrument a provision that Congress should "coin money and fix the value thereof;" and the Constitution prohibits making anything but "gold and silver" lawful money. So silver is written into our basic law. Shortly after President Washington took office in 1789 the Congress passed the first Mint Act, setting up the U. S. Mint. In that Act, signed by President Washington on April 2, 1792, the weight of the American dollar was fixed, and it was provided how much silver should be contained in a silver dollar and how much gold should be contained in a gold dollar. It was decided that 371 1/4 grains of pure silver was to be the standard dollar of America. That standard with respect to the pure silver content of the dollar has never changed.
Citation

APA: Pat McCarran  (1947)  The New "Crime" of Silver: Who?s Guilty? ? Producers Hold They Should Receive the Monetary Price, $1.29; Consumers Argue for Free Open Market as an Industrial Metal ? The Producers? Side

MLA: Pat McCarran The New "Crime" of Silver: Who?s Guilty? ? Producers Hold They Should Receive the Monetary Price, $1.29; Consumers Argue for Free Open Market as an Industrial Metal ? The Producers? Side. The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers, 1947.

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