Pacific Coast Gold Standard
California and Oregon remained on a gold standard during the
1862 to 1879 period when the rest of the country transacted business on an
inconvertible paper standard. During the Civil War the Confederate government
abandoned all monetary discipline and flooded the South with Confederate paper
money. In 1862 the North began issuing inconvertible greenbacks, and only in
1879 provided for the redemption of greenbacks in gold and silver specie. During
the 1862 to 1879 period Gresham’s law drove all gold and silver coins out of
circulation in the East, but state laws and organized business interests kept
gold in circulation on the Pacific coast. The Pacific coast could boast of no
less than $25 million of gold and silver coins in circulation during the period
when the rest of the country used paper money as a medium of exchange and
standard of value.
Before the Civil War both California and Oregon relied exclusively on gold
and silver coins, as opposed to bank notes, to circulate as money. When
greenbacks were first issued, bank notes accounted for almost half of the
circulating money in the East. The constitutions of both California and Oregon
banned the issuance and circulation of paper money, and banks were forbidden to
create “paper to circulate as money.”
Aside from legal barriers to the circulation of paper money, merchants
collectively agreed not to accept greenbacks on par with gold. The merchants of
San Francisco agreed to neither receive nor make payment in greenbacks at any
rate other than the greenback market value in terms of gold. They set prices in
gold and accepted greenbacks at whatever discount the market dictated. When
leading merchants in Portland agreed to accept greenbacks at the going rate in
San Francisco, merchants throughout Oregon enforced the same policy. The
merchants in Portland went so far as to circulate an announcement that customers
who insisted upon paying debts in greenbacks would find their names on a
blacklist of the Portland merchants’ association. Commercial ostracism awaited
any businessperson who paid a business debt in greenbacks, that is, who
“greenbacked” a creditor. Banks in California and Oregon refused to accept
deposits in greenbacks, and newspapers worked to keep down the circulation of
greenbacks.
After the federal government began issuance of greenbacks, the legislatures
of both California and Oregon enacted measures allowing people to contract debts
in either coin or greenbacks, but requiring that payment be made as specified in
the contract. The Oregon legislature enacted legislation requiring the payment
of state and local taxes in only gold and silver coin, ruling out greenbacks.
The California Supreme Court ruled that greenbacks were not acceptable in the
payment of state and county taxes.
Organized opposition to greenbacks triggered a bitter debate on the Pacific
coast. Critics charged that repudiation of greenbacks was tantamount to refusing to share in the financial burden of the Civil War.
Crowding all the greenbacks on to the East Coast caused faster depreciation of
the greenbacks, putting a greater burden of inflation on the East Coast.
Although prices in greenbacks doubled over the course of the Civil War, Oregon
prices in gold increased only 25 percent.
Two factors may help explain opposition to greenbacks on the Pacific coast.
First, gold discoveries in California had already given that region a taste of
inflation caused by increases in the money supply. A paper issue would only
accelerate money growth, contributing to further inflation. Second, as a
gold-producing region, the Pacific coast did not want to encourage the use of
any other form of money. As abundant gold production drove out silver money, the
Pacific coast moved essentially to a gold standard between 1862 and 1879, a
unique exception to the paper standard that reigned in the rest of the
country.
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