Sherman Silver Act of 1890 (United States)
The Sherman Silver Act of 1890 nearly doubled the government’s
monthly purchase of silver, and provided for the issuance of legal tender
Treasury notes in payment of silver.
The Coinage Act of 1873 made no provision for the coinage of silver dollars,
an omission that became an angry point of contention as deflation and depression
spread in the late nineteenth century, and silver interest saw silver prices
steadily decline. A “free silver” movement sprang up calling for unlimited
coinage of silver. The Bland-Allison Act of 1878 provided for restricted
purchase of silver and coinage of silver dollars, but silver prices continued to
fall, and agitation for “free silver” mounted strength. The Sherman Silver Act
of 1890 extended the monetization of silver about as far as possible without
embracing “free silver,” and returning to a bimetallic gold-silver standard.
The act called for the Treasury to purchase 4,500,000 ounces of silver per
month at market prices as long as the market prices did not exceed $1.29 per
ounce, the historic mint price since 1837. The Treasury was to pay for the
bullion in treasury notes in denominations not less than $1 or more than $1,000.
These Treasury notes were legal tender for all debts, private and public. The
act made these notes redeemable in either gold coin or silver coin, depending
upon the discretion of the Treasury. The act only required the Treasury to coin
quantities of silver bullion as needed to redeem Treasury notes.
The act authorized the issuance of Treasury notes to save on coinage
expenses. Since the market value of silver fell short of its official price,
silver was preferred over gold in the payment of government obligations. Silver
dollars tended to return to the Treasury as fast as they were issued,
notwithstanding the Treasury’s practice to ship the silver coins to distant
places at no cost. Complaints were heard about the storage costs and
inconvenience of the silver dollars. Before the Act of 1890 the government was
issuing Treasury notes that were not legal tender.
The Sherman Silver Act passed the Congress after a “free silver” bill had
already passed the Senate. Apparently one motivation for enacting this
legislation was to avoid what gold standard defenders saw as a worst
alternative, a free silver bill.
Since the United States and the countries of Europe were on either a defacto
or an official gold standard in the 1890s, gold coin was preferred over silver
coin. Banks tended to ask the Treasury to redeem treasury notes in gold coin,
and the Treasury obliged. The Treasury’s gold reserves dwindled while silver
reserves grew. Foreigners who had purchased American securities with gold became
fearful that these securities would be redeemed in silver, at a rate well below
the market value of silver. Foreigners began to sell American securities, taking
payment in gold and causing a gold outflow to Europe. In 1893, after the
government had to sell bonds to raise gold reserves, Congress repealed the
Sherman Silver Act. The Treasury stopped purchasing silver except for subsidiary
coinage, and the flight of capital from the United States ceased. The Gold
Standard Act of 1900 officially put the United States on the gold standard.
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