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In Senate of the United States
February 17, 1817. ; Mr. Mason, of N.H. submitted the following motions for consideration -
Report of the president and directors of the Bank of the State of So. Carolina, Oct. 1, 1819
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Resolution by Mr. Ward, of Massachusetts
February 9, 1816. Read and ordered to lie upon the table -
A Bill for the More Effectual Collection of the Public Revenue in the Lawful Money of the United States
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A Bill Regulating the Currency within the United States of the Gold Coins of Great Britain, France, Portugal and Spain
and the Crowns of France and Five-Franc Pieces of Napoleon -
A Bill to Prevent the Circulation of the Notes of Unchartered Banks in the District of Columbia
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A Bill to Prevent the Circulation of the Notes of Unchartered Banks in the District of Columbia
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Report of the committee, appointed on the 27th November last, to inquire into the expediency of amending the laws which regulate the coins of the United States, and foreign coins
accompanied with "A bill, supplementary to the act establishing a mint," and "A bill continuing for a limited time, the currency of the crowns and five franc pieces of France." ; January 26, 1819. Read, and with the bill, committed to a committee of the whole House to-morrow -
In Senate of the United States
February 22, 1817. ; Mr. Campbell, chairman of the Committee on Finance, communicated the following correspondence with the Secretary of the Treasury -
Letter from the secretary of the Treasury, to the chairman of the Committee on the National Currency, accompanying a bill regulating the currency within the United States; of the gold coins of Great Britain, Portugal, France, and Spain; and of certain silver coins of France
March 20th, 1816, read, and ordered to be printed -
Letter from the secretary of the Treasury to the chairman of the Committee on the National Currency, in reply to inquiries by said committee as to the practicability and expediency of collecting the dues of government in gold, silver, and copper coin, treasury notes, and the notes of such banks as pay specie for their bills
April 6th, 1816. Laid before the House by the chairman of the Committee on the National Currency, and committed with the bill "for the more effectual collection of the public revenue in the lawful money of the United States," to a committee of the whole House on Monday next -
Plan of the Original Security Bank, established in ... Strand, London
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Draft of a report on the coin of this realm
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Arrêt de la Cour des monnoies, qui ordonne l'exécution de ceux des 20 décembre 1777 & 18 mars 1778
et qui, en conséquence, fait d'itératives défenses à toutes personnes, de quelque état & condition qu'elles soient, de recevoir ou donner en payement aucunes pièces de fabrique étrangère, aucunes vieilles espèces, ni aucunes pièces de monnoie dont l'empreinte seroit totalement effacée ... du 3 février 1783 -
A proclamation dischargiug [sic] forraign copper or brass-coyn
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Johann Ludewig Schmidts Ausführliche Abhandelung der strittigen Rechts-Frage, In was für Münzsorten eine Geldschuld abzutragen?
nebst einer Vorrede worin zugleich von dem Nutzen der gemeinen Meinungen und einer genauern Bibliothek in der Rechtsgelahrheit gehandelt wird -
A vindication of some assertions relating to coin and trade
from the reflections made by the author of the essay on ways and means, in his book, intituled, Discourses on the publick revenues, and on the trade of England,&c. part. II -
The charge against President Grant and Attorney General Hoar
of packing the Supreme Court of the United States, to secure the reversal of the legal tender decision, by the appointment of Judges Bradley and Strong, refuted -
Speech of S.W. Brandom, A.B., October 15, 1883
was the Legal Tender Act of February 25, 1862, constitutional in its operations upon antecedent debts? -
Legal tender
a study in English and American monetary history -
Proclamation for calling in the forreign coyn, now current in Scotland
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By the King
a proclamation touching the currencie of certaine French coyne -
By the King
the Kings most excellent Maiestie by the aduice of his priuie counsell ... doeth publish and declare ... that all coynes of gold and siluer ... shall bee ... currant ... at such weight, finenesse, and value, as the same were currant the first day of August last past -
By the Quene
the Quenes Maiestie vnderstandyng that where of late the peece of golde called the pistolet was made currant at fyue shyllynges and ten pence -
By the Quene
the Quenes Maiestie beyng infourmed, that in some partes of her realme, sundrye either ignoraunt or malicious people do spreade rumours abrode that the base testons of fourpence halfpenye should not be currant after thende of Ianuary next