History Daily - America’s First Paper Money
Episode Date: December 10, 2025December 10, 1690. A failed attack on Quebec, Canada leads to Massachusetts Colony creating the first paper currency in the Western Hemisphere. This episode originally aired in 2024. Support the show!... Join Into History for ad-free listening and more. History Daily is a co-production of Airship and Noiser.Go to HistoryDaily.com for more history, daily.
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We AJ-tootteals
We all give us tootteelm's
seven-vodden taku.
In afts
june up to do with
5,000 cupillist
coffee or
a truck with
four-certain
and can't
be a bonsai-pun
toymistola.
AJ-tootteel
you can't
calli-theat
all-ty-Pewood
t'cuhl.
Catson.
It's the early
hours of June 28th,
1689,
in the colonial
village of Dover,
New Hampshire.
In a simple one-room
Wood Cabin,
A woman of the indigenous Pentecook tribe creeps past the sleeping bodies of an English farmer and his wife.
She stops briefly by their bed, checking to make sure they're deeply asleep.
Then she keeps moving, silently, toward the cabin's locked door.
Yesterday evening, the Pentecook woman arrived in this English colony asking for shelter.
The farmer and his wife were happy to offer her a blanket by the fire for the night,
but the Pentecook woman had no intention of sleeping.
13 years ago, English colonists captured 400 of the Pentecook and sold them into slavery.
Many families were separated forever, and the Pentecook have never forgotten what the English did.
So tonight, it's time for revenge.
The Pentecook woman tiptoes through the darkness, but kicks over a pot that's been left near the fire.
The noise seems deafening in the quiet of the night, and she freezes,
desperately thinking of an excuse to explain why she's up and creeping around the camp.
cabin in the dark. But the Englishman and his wife don't wake up. Instead, the farmer only turns over
and then resumes snoring. Hardly daring to breathe, the Pentecook woman hurries to the door.
Slowly, she slides the bolt back and eases the door open, and she peers out. After a moment,
she sees there's movement in the darkness. Three Pentecook warriors emerge from the trees,
their faces chalky in the moonlight, the metal of their sharpened knives glinting beside them.
One pats the woman on her shoulder before slipping past her into the cabin.
She waits and watches by the doorway.
From the other room there is a thud, a gasp, and then the Englishman snoring stops.
By the end of this nighttime raid, 23 colonists in Dover are dead.
The English are outraged by the attack, but soon conclude that another power must have persuaded the Pentecook to carry out the slaughter.
England's old enemy, the French, are blamed, and the fallout from this raid,
result in war in North America. But this conflict will threaten to bring the local economy to its
knees until the English colonists come up with a radical solution, the continent's first paper currency,
which was established on December 10, 1690. When the show continues in just a few seconds,
I'm going to repeat our catchphrase, history is made every day, and it's true. All around us,
history is happening, but I want to make a little history of my own. So I've been planning something
exciting, a History Daily Live show, and I want you to make history with me. So to be the first
to hear about tour dates, which cities I'll be visiting, special VIP opportunities, and to get a
discount on tickets, head to historydailylive.com. That's historydailylive.com. This is going to go down
in the history books, so go to historydaily live.com. AJ. Tuotteets, kirste,
We're even right.
We'll have enough
Tootten our work at,
KERNightighter,
we'll let's make it.
Maelmastopement.
Myelmast
everything happens.
Sixen
is puttable
in wauhdice
mucing,
and the
J.
tootteilta,
you can't
callusteate
and new
topightighte.
Tutustle-lottet.fi.
Are a new cotio ki-kiris.
Hae asuntilanae muttomast
S-pankist,
Paikkkkotisovatis.
Avahsmobili and do linahakenh
S-Pankmukestim-Pank.
We AJ-tootteel
all we'll give
all the dopteemme
in afti-uptu-cli-cuh
or in front-cuitly
or a year-cuitly
over, or you're
togifted and
can't bea-boe-to-octs.
A.J.
Tuotttealta you can't
calusteat all-the-the-to-octal
I'll always seven-vodden taku'll.
Gatson.com.
Are new a cotio, Ki-kiris.
Hae asuntolanae muttomast
S-Pankist,
Paikokkotot-Mobattomast.
Avae, T, Linawakem,
S-Pank,
Suomen Mutquattomiming Pank.
From Noisor in Airship,
I'm Lindsay Graham,
and this is History Daily.
History is made every day.
On this podcast, every day,
we tell the true stories
of the people and events
that shaped our world.
Today is December 10th,
America's first paper money.
It's March 1690 in Boston, Massachusetts, nine months after the deadly raid on Dover.
Forty-year-old Sir William Phipps sits in his parlor as a dusty messenger breathlessly reports news from the north.
As Provost Marshal General, Sir William is in charge of protecting Massachusetts colony.
But only a few minutes ago, this messenger arrived with disturbing intelligence.
The town of Salmon Falls has been attacked, and dozens of colonization.
are thought to be dead. For the past few decades, relations have been tense between the English
and French colonies in North America. The English colony of Massachusetts borders the French
colony of Acadia, and just like their countrymen in Europe, the English and French colonists
are often at war with each other. But unlike in Europe, there's a third power at play here.
Native American tribes already live on the land that European settlers have claimed, and the
French have encouraged their native allies to harass English settlement.
close to the border. Over the past year, Native American forces have killed English colonists
in a nighttime raid on Dover. They've destroyed an English fort at Pemiquid, and now they've
attacked Salmon Falls. It means that the English have almost been completely thrown out of the
northern part of Massachusetts colony. And unless Sir William does something about it, he's sure that
the French will soon move in and seize the land that the English have lost. When his messenger
Sir finishes the report, Sir William immediately heads toward the mansion occupied by Simon Bradstreet,
the governor of Massachusetts. There, Sir William offers to lead a military expedition to the north.
Sir William knows that Governor Bradstreet has already planned an offensive against the Native Americans
attacking the English in Massachusetts. But this latest setback has spurred Sir William to
propose a second and more ambitious venture. He wants to attack the French colonists,
the real power behind these deadly raids.
But there's an obstacle to Sir William's idea, the cost.
Massachusetts can't afford to put two separate armies in the field
if they have to pay for both in advance.
So Sir William and Governor Bradstreet come up with a novel way around the colony's
lack of ready funds.
The soldiers who join Sir William's campaign against the French
will not be paid with coin.
Instead, they'll be paid with bits of paper.
These letters of credit will be paid by the colonial government
when the campaign is over.
The hope is that the plunder,
captured from the French
will more than cover the cost of these promised wages,
and effectively, the plan will allow Massachusetts
to put two armies in the field for the price of one.
A few weeks later, in late April, 1690,
Sir William sets sail from Boston
with a fleet of five ships and more than 400 militiamen.
After a two-week voyage,
they moor outside Port Royal,
the capital of France's Acadia colony.
Sir William sends an emissary to demand the French surrender
and to his surprise, they immediately accept.
He soon realizes why.
As he rides into Port Royal at the head of his army,
Sir William concede that the city's defenses are crumbling.
The palisade is in a state of disrepair.
There are no cannon mounted on the walls.
The French colonists clearly weren't expecting a fight,
and Sir William's expedition has caught them by surprise.
Pleased that he's taken the city without firing a shot,
Sir William negotiates a settlement with the governor of Acadia.
The two men agree that the colonists will surrender all supplies belonging to the French crown,
and in return, the English will leave the people of Port Royal unharmed, and their personal property left alone.
But as Sir William leaves Port Royal and returns to his ships, he spots French soldiers, removing stores from the fort.
He thinks that they're trying to hide their supplies before the English can seize them.
Furious that the French have immediately gone back on their word, Sir William announces that the deal is off.
He tells his soldiers to enter Port Royal at once and take whatever they want, no matter who it belongs to.
Over the next few hours, the English soldiers proceed to ransack the city.
They steal private property, they burn crops and kill livestock, they even pillage the fort's chapel,
seizing its valuable chalices and decorations.
Then, after days of disorder, Sir William will set sail and return to Massachusetts.
There he'll receive a hero's welcome, and his success in the north and the prayer
of his fellow Englishmen will only emboldened Sir William.
Soon he'll try to replicate his successful raid on Port Royal with another attack on the French.
But this time, the results will be very different.
We AJ.
We'll give us tootteir me tootten take to-one.
In fact-aughts, you'd doodathe up to-pillistakoff.
Or, you'll try to make upon-uroping, and casvents, and caswomen.
A.J. Tuottealta, you'll start calustead all the place place to-a-old.
Katson less, AJ2Tuoteet.Fi.
On a new cotio, Ki-Karissa.
Hae asuntolinaw muchtomast
S-Pankist, paucca-cotch-a-shaugh-a-shaven.
A-Mobile and Tewanhawmackus.
S-Pank, S-Pank,
S-Pank, we AJ-toottella,
we'll give to-octuellymusts,
june-cuh-cuh-cuh-cubilist cah.
Or, you're at rucklis-a-n-mall-in-up.
And, you're gonna dogg-twean-to-doctal.
A-Tuptteil-ta-sat-cletes.
It's a lot of the work
to takem.
Cutson less
AJuautteet.fi.
Iskutnikerriss.
Hae asuntolina
muttomast from
Ackxxed
Aighton
Aighton.
Avae
Mobili and Tee
Lainanhackmackm
S-Pank,
It's October 16,
1960 on the
St. Lawrence River
outside Quebec.
Five months
after the sack of
Port Royal.
On the deck
of an English
warship,
50-year-old
Major Thomas Savage
offers a salute
to his commanding
officer. Sir William Phipps wishes him luck in return. Then Major Savage carefully descends a
rope ladder down the side of the ship and climbs into a small rowboat waiting at the bottom.
Two sailors man the oars, and as soon as Major Savage is settled in his seat, they push away
from the English flagship and are soon cutting across the water towards shore. After capturing
the French city of Port Royal without a fight, Sir William Phipps returned to Massachusetts
and immediately began preparing for a second expedition. Sir William hoped,
to deliver a knockout blow to the French and North America by targeting Quebec,
one of the largest settlements on the continent and the capital of the French colony of Canada.
He knew taking Quebec would be harder than conquering Port Royal,
so Sir William assembled a far larger fleet this time.
32 ships and over 2,000 militiamen joined the venture,
which again was financed using paper letters of credit.
And only a few hours ago, this English fleet dropped anchor outside Quebec,
and Sir William has now dispatched Major Savage to demand the French garrison surrender.
But unlike in Port Royal, the colonists in Quebec have had plenty of time to prepare for the attack.
They've also heard all about how the English sacked Port Royal even after its governor surrendered,
so they have no intention of giving up without a fight.
And as Major Savage reaches the outskirts of Quebec, he can see that new defenses have
been built over the past few weeks.
The wooden palisade has been strengthened, and metal cannon.
poke out menacingly from behind stone fortifications.
But before Major Savage can take in any more of the defenses,
a party of French soldiers hustle out of a gate in the Palisade and then seize him.
They turn Savage around and blindfold him before marching him into the city.
Major Savage knows that he's been blindfolded to stop him gathering intelligence on Quebec's
manpower and defenses, but it's still unsettling,
and the French jeer impelled him with rotten fruit as he's guided through the streets.
Finally, his blindfold is ripped off and the sudden bright light makes him wince.
But when his eyes adjust, Major Savage sees a smartly dressed French officer glaring.
The man introduces himself as Louis de Bott de Frontenac, the governor of Canada colony.
Gathering himself, Major Savage, delivers his commander's message.
The French must surrender or face an immediate attack.
Governor Frontenac snorts and says he has a message for the English.
He'll hang Major Savage from the palisade for everyone in the fleet to see.
see. Major Savage's stomach lurches, and for a few minutes it looks like the governor's threat
will be carried out. But then a clergyman pulls Frontenac aside. It's the bishop of Quebec,
and he talks the angry governor down. Major Savage is eventually freed and hurries back to the
English fleet. Frontenac may have been convinced to spare Major Savage, but his message is still
clear enough. The French will not surrender. After Savage returns to the English flagship and
reports on what happened. Sir William orders his soldiers to attack. But the English prove
unable to secure a foothold on the banks of the St. Lawrence River. They're harassed by French
musket fire before they can even reach land, and soon the larger cannon let loose too, pounding
the English fleet and forcing the ships to retreat. Eventually, Sir William Phipps must admit
defeat. He has no chance of capturing Quebec, and after agreeing to a prisoner swap with
Governor Frontenac, the humbled English force sails away.
As they head back to Boston, the mood among the English soldiers is bleak.
But it's not just their defeat on the battlefield that's affecting morale.
The men haven't yet been paid.
Instead, they have only letters of credit,
and rumors soon spread through the fleet that the colony won't now be able to honor its promises.
Sir William only prevents a rebellion by swearing that the soldiers will be paid
as soon as they return to Boston.
But that will only delay the problem.
The colonial authorities will have to come up with a solution quickly,
otherwise for William's defeat won't just result in embarrassment. It will result in mutiny.
It's December 10th, 1690 in Boston, Massachusetts, six weeks after an English fleet was defeated at the Battle of Quebec.
86-year-old Simon Bradstreet grunts in pain as he lowers his aching joints into his seats in Boston's townhouse.
Although he's one of the oldest men in Massachusetts, Simon is not enjoying a relaxed retirement.
He's the governor, and he's here today to preside over the colony.
General Court. When Sir William Fipps' fleet returned to Boston, the militiamen on board were
on the verge of mutiny because they had not been paid. And the failure to take Quebec
means that Massachusetts doesn't have enough cash to settle the soldiers' letters of credit.
So Governor Bradstreet has been forced to come up with a radical solution.
Calling the meeting to order, Governor Bradstreet asks the delegates to authorize the printing
of 7,000 pounds in emergency paper currency to pay the soldiers. This is a kind of.
controversial idea. Banknotes of a kind have been used in China since the 7th century,
but more than a thousand years later they are yet to catch on in the West.
Coins have an intrinsic worth, thanks to the precious metals they're made from,
but a paper banknote has only symbolic value. It is effectively a promise to whoever possesses
it that the banknote can be exchanged at some point in the future for real currency.
But it only works as money if everyone in the community believes in this promise.
Governor Bradstreet can tell from the concerned expressions around him that the delegates are reluctant to agree.
But he promises that the paper currency will be withdrawn as soon as possible,
but reiterates this is the only way to avoid a mutiny.
Then, looking over the members of the court, he calls a vote.
To his relief, they agreed to print the paper money.
But despite Governor Bradstreet's promise that it would only be an emergency measure,
the people of the colony soon see the advantages of using paper money.
Compared to coins, it's far safer and a more convenient way of carrying cash, especially in large amounts.
So paper currency remains in circulation permanently.
Slowly, other countries and territories will follow Massachusetts' example.
In 1695, the Bank of England in London will introduce its own banknotes.
And in the 18th century, the War of Independence will spur the other American colonies
to introduce a common paper currency of their own.
Eventually, banknotes will become commonplace all around the world, an unremarkable part of
everyday life, far removed from the emergency measure they were intended to be, when they were
first introduced in Massachusetts on December 10, 1690.
Next on History Daily, December 11, 1963.
Three days after being kidnapped, 19-year-old Frank Sinatra Jr. is released by his captors.
From Noisor and Airship, this is History Daily, hosted, edited, and executive produced by
me, Lindsay Graham. Audio editing by
Mohamed Shazid. Sound designed by
Molly Bond. Music by Thrum.
This episode is written and researched
by Scott Reeves, edited by
Dorian Marina. Managing producer
Emily Burke. Executive producers
are William Simpson for Airship
and Pascal Hughes for Noiser.
