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WC-007 United States · Continental dollar 1779

The Continental — The Currency That Funded a Revolution and Then Funded a Phrase

Peak Inflation
~40:1 vs specie by 1780 (~1.7% of face)
Highest Note
$80
War
American Revolution
Status
Repudiated

Summary

The Continental dollar paid for American independence and was bankrupted by it. Issued by the Continental Congress from 1775 to fund the Revolutionary War, the paper "Continental" had a fatal design flaw written into the body that created it: Congress had no power to tax, and therefore no credible way ever to redeem the notes it printed. It printed them anyway, nearly $200 million of them by late 1779, and the market did the arithmetic. By 1780 a Continental was worth about a fortieth of its face in silver; by 1781 it had stopped circulating as money altogether. The phrase "not worth a Continental" entered the language and stayed there. When the new federal government finally cleaned up the wreckage in the 1790s, it redeemed the surviving notes at roughly one percent of face — a penny on the dollar — and most holders, having long since written the paper off, never bothered to turn it in. The verdict is repudiation, softened only by that token settlement.

The cause is the cleanest in this archive precisely because the mechanism was so bare. The thirteen colonies had rebelled in part over taxation, and the Congress that emerged had no authority to lay taxes of its own and only feeble means to extract requisitions from the states. It could not borrow much abroad early in the war and had no gold reserves. So it financed the fighting the only way open to it: by emitting bills of credit, paper dollars promising future redemption that Congress had no power to guarantee. Each emission diluted the last, and as confidence eroded the dilution turned into collapse.

The numbers tell the story without embellishment. From a manageable early float, Continental emissions ran to about $199,990,000 by the final issue of November 1779 — Congress thought it had hit a self-imposed $200 million ceiling, a touch off due to an accounting error. Against that flood, the notes had fallen to between a fifth and a seventh of face by late 1778 and to roughly a fortieth by 1780. In March 1780 Congress formally acknowledged the rout, offering to swap old Continentals for new state-guaranteed notes at forty to one. The currency that had bought a war could no longer reliably buy a meal.

What "resolved" it was less a stabilization than a winding-up. Congress stopped emitting after November 1779. Robert Morris and, after 1789, Alexander Hamilton rebuilt American credit on a different basis — taxation, assumption of state debts, a national bank, and hard coin. Under the new Constitution the old Continentals could be exchanged for interest-bearing federal bonds at one percent of face value. Only about three percent of the notes were ever turned in; the rest had been spent, lost, or discarded as the worthless paper they had become. The episode taught the framers a lesson they wrote into the new republic's foundations: a government that wants sound money needs the power to tax.

Timeline

June 1775
A war on credit
The Continental Congress, with no power to tax and at war with Britain, authorizes its first emission of paper "Continental" dollars to pay for the fight.
1775–1777
The presses warm up
Successive emissions fund the army; early notes hold value reasonably well as patriotism and necessity sustain confidence.
1777–1778
Dilution bites
With states slow to supply requisitions and foreign credit thin, Congress keeps emitting; by late 1778 a Continental is worth only a fifth to a seventh of face in specie.
1779
"Not worth a Continental."
The currency has depreciated to pennies on the dollar; the phrase becomes a national byword for worthlessness.
1 September 1779
The ceiling
Congress caps total emissions at $200 million, recognizing the spiral it has created.
29 November 1779
The last emission
Congress reaches the cap — an actual $199,990,000 — and issues no more Continentals; paper finance is effectively abandoned.
18 March 1780
Forty to one
Congress resolves to retire old Continentals in exchange for new state emissions backed by Spanish silver dollars at a rate of 40 Continental to 1 — a formal, near-total devaluation.
1781
Out of circulation
The Continental has become so worthless that it ceases to function as money; Robert Morris turns to other instruments to keep the war financed.
1781–1783
Won on other money
Foreign loans and Morris's notes carry the Revolution to victory; the Continental is already dead.
1790
The penny settlement
Under Hamilton's funding plan, surviving Continentals may be exchanged for federal bonds at 1 percent of face value (100 to 1).
1790s
The quiet end
Only about 3 percent of the notes are ever redeemed; the rest, long discarded, are never claimed — the Continental is effectively repudiated.

The Fuse: A Congress Without the Power to Tax

The Continental's defect was structural and present at birth. The American Revolution was, in no small part, a tax revolt, and the Continental Congress that organized the resistance was a coordinating body of sovereign states, not a true government. It had no authority to levy taxes, no reliable way to compel the states to meet their financial requisitions, no gold reserves, and, in the war's early years, little access to foreign loans. Yet it had to raise and supply an army against the most powerful empire on earth.

Faced with enormous expenses and no orthodox revenue, Congress did the only thing it could: it emitted bills of credit — paper Continental dollars that promised future redemption. The promise was the problem. Redemption would ultimately require taxation, and Congress could not tax; it could only ask the states to do so, and the states, themselves issuing their own paper and fighting their own fiscal battles, were slow and inconsistent. So each Continental was a promise no one was clearly obligated, or able, to keep. As long as patriotic confidence and the novelty of the notes held, they circulated near par. But the foundation was sand: a currency whose redemption depended on a power its issuer did not possess.

The Spiral: Two Hundred Million and a Fortieth of Face

The dilution accelerated as the war dragged on and the emissions piled up. Congress returned to the press again and again — there was no alternative — and the float swelled toward $200 million. The market responded as markets do to an unbacked, ever-expanding currency: it discounted each successive note more steeply. By late 1778 a Continental fetched only a fifth to a seventh of its face in specie. By 1780 it was down to roughly a fortieth. Prices in Continentals soared correspondingly, and the dollar that had once equipped a regiment struggled to buy a day's provisions.

The collapse minted its own epitaph. "Not worth a Continental" became, and remains, an American idiom for worthlessness — a rare case of a currency surviving chiefly as a figure of speech. Congress saw the spiral clearly and tried to arrest it. On 1 September 1779 it capped total emissions at $200 million; on 29 November 1779 it reached that ceiling — the true total a hair under, at $199,990,000, thanks to an accounting slip — and stopped printing for good. Then, on 18 March 1780, it formalized the devaluation it could no longer deny, resolving to exchange old Continentals for new state-issued notes backed by Spanish silver dollars at forty to one. A government cannot more plainly confess that its money has failed than by officially pricing it at a fortieth of its face. By 1781 the Continental had simply ceased to circulate; Robert Morris, the Superintendent of Finance, turned to foreign loans and his own notes to keep the cause alive.

The Reckoning: A Penny on the Dollar, and a Lesson in the Constitution

The Continental was not stabilized; it was wound up, and the Revolution was won on other money — French loans, Morris's instruments, and hard coin. The reckoning came after victory, with the new federal government. Alexander Hamilton's funding program of 1790, the great consolidation of the young republic's finances, addressed the dead Continental along with the rest of the war debt. The surviving notes could be exchanged for interest-bearing federal bonds at one percent of their face value — a hundred old Continentals for one dollar of new federal credit.

That was, in effect, a repudiation with a courtesy payment. A penny on the dollar is not redemption; it is an acknowledgment that the paper was worthless, paired with a small gesture to draw a line under the affair and establish the new government's seriousness about honoring debt, however discounted. And the public had already voted with its actions: only about three percent of the Continentals ever issued were turned in for the exchange. The overwhelming majority had been spent at depreciated rates, lost, or simply thrown away years earlier, when their holders concluded — correctly — that the notes would never be worth anything. The deeper resolution was constitutional. The framers, with the Continental's collapse fresh in memory, built the new federal government around exactly the power its predecessor had lacked: Article I gave Congress the authority to lay and collect taxes, and the assumption of war debts, the Bank of the United States, and a hard-money coinage followed. The Continental died so that the dollar could be born with the power to redeem itself.

The Five Factors

01
Money needs a taxing power behind it
The Continental's fatal flaw was that the Congress issuing it could not tax, so it could never credibly redeem the notes. Paper is a claim on the issuer's future revenue; with no revenue power, the claim is empty, and the market prices it accordingly. The cure was constitutional — a government that could tax.
02
Each emission taxes the last holder
Every new tranche of Continentals diluted the value of those already circulating, transferring purchasing power from holders to the issuing Congress. That is the inflation tax in its purest form, levied here on a population that had rebelled against taxation in the first place — an irony the framers did not miss.
03
Confidence is the only real backing for fiat
Early Continentals circulated near par on patriotism alone, and collapsed when patriotism could no longer outrun arithmetic. An unbacked currency lives and dies by the belief that it will hold value; once holders expect depreciation, they spend fast, and the expectation fulfills itself.
04
A government can repudiate by ratio
The 1780 swap at 40:1 and the 1790 redemption at 100:1 were repudiations dressed as policy: each formally priced the currency at a tiny fraction of face. When a state retires its money at a penny on the dollar, the holders have been defaulted on, whatever the transaction is called.
05
The wreck can build the reform
The Continental's failure directly shaped the Constitution's grant of fiscal power and Hamilton's hard-money, tax-backed financial system. A monetary catastrophe, fully absorbed, can produce the institution that prevents the next one — here, a federal government deliberately designed to never again be a debtor without the means to pay.

Aftermath

The Continental's collapse fell on the soldiers, suppliers, and ordinary patriots who had accepted the notes in good faith and watched them dwindle to nothing — a real wartime sacrifice borne by the people least able to absorb it, even as speculators who bought depreciated paper cheaply sometimes profited from the eventual bond exchange. The token 1790 redemption returned almost nothing to almost no one; the currency was, for practical purposes, a total loss to those who had held it.

The lasting legacy was the United States itself, or at least its fiscal constitution. The framers gathered in 1787 with the Continental's worthlessness as a vivid object lesson, and they wrote its remedy into the new charter: a Congress empowered to tax, a federal assumption of the Revolutionary debt, a national bank, and a coinage anchored in silver and gold. The phrase "not worth a Continental" survived as folk memory of what unbacked paper could do, and the American distrust of fiat experiments it seeded ran deep for more than a century. The Continental dollar thus occupies an unusual place among dead currencies: it failed completely, was repudiated in all but name, and yet its failure was generative — the bankrupt money that taught a new nation how to keep its money sound.

Lessons

  1. A currency is only as good as its issuer's power to redeem it; a government that cannot tax cannot credibly print, so fiscal authority must precede monetary ambition.
  2. Every additional emission of unbacked paper is a hidden tax on whoever already holds it — the inflation tax falls hardest on the patriotic and the trusting.
  3. Fiat money runs on confidence alone, and confidence cannot be commanded; once holders expect a currency to fall, their flight from it makes the fall certain.
  4. A redemption at a penny on the dollar is a repudiation with a receipt — read the ratio, not the rhetoric, to know whether savers have been defaulted on.
  5. A well-understood failure can be the foundation of a durable reform; the Continental's collapse is written, in the negative, into the U.S. Constitution's power to tax.

References