Whitney Coin
1 2018-12-07T16:35:58+00:00 Amy DeBenedictis 650c68bf3200a3549fec5a0f342af0041fb18bb9 27 2 Whitney Company One Cent Coin plain 2018-12-07T16:43:49+00:00 Amy DeBenedictis 650c68bf3200a3549fec5a0f342af0041fb18bb9This page is referenced by:
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media/Whitney Glassworks script currency (1).jpg
2018-11-29T21:55:20+00:00
Script Currency - The Origins
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image_header
2018-12-13T13:16:04+00:00
Company money, also known as script currency or shin plaster, was common among the glassworks of the early 1800’s. The name shin plaster derived from “chein piastre,” which means dog money or dog-eared money. This money was paid to the workers as their wages and was accepted only at the company-owned general store. They would also use this money to barter with others in the town for services such as the blacksmith or carpenter. This would have limited the worker’s options as to where they could spend their money and in essence kept them trapped by the company. Workers could sometimes sell company currency for real cash, but it was usually quite discounted.
Paper currency like this is just one form that company money took. Less common than paper currency was tokens, or coins issued by the company. By 1863, however, the metal used to make the tokens had a greater value than the face value of the token, further decreasing their popularity. Another method was pass books. These were ledgers that the company would keep and they would add the worker’s wages and then subtract any purchases that they made from the company store. This bypassed the need for paper script and was more common among smaller glassworks.All forms of company currency was outlawed in New Jersey in the late 1800’s. Sources seem to attribute this to the devaluing of company currency and multiple strikes by glassworkers demanding to be paid in U.S. currency as it was more stable and worth more than the script currency.
Script currency helped to shape Glassboro. Glassboro was a company town and the use of script currency helped to maintain that. Workers were in essence trapped by the glassworks. They were paid in currency that was accepted only at the store run by the company. While the store would have had everything that town residence would have needed, they would not have had the option to go anywhere else.
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media/Whitney Glassworks script currency.jpg
2018-12-13T13:15:36+00:00
Scrip Currency - The Origins
11
image_header
2018-12-16T21:44:07+00:00
Glassboro, originally known as the Glass House in the Woods, was one of many company towns in the 1800s that paid their workers in company-made money. Company money, known as scrip currency or shin plaster, was common among the glassworks of the early nineteenth century. The name shin plaster derived from “chein piastre,” which means dog money or dog-eared money. This money was paid to the workers as their wages and was accepted only at the company-owned general store. They would also use this money to barter with others in the town for services such as the blacksmith or carpenter. This would have limited the worker’s options as to where they could spend their money and in essence kept them trapped by the company. Workers could sometimes sell company currency for real cash, but it was usually quite discounted.
Paper currency was just one of the forms that company money took. Less common than paper currency was metal tokens or coins issued by the company. By 1863, however, the metal used to make the tokens had a greater value than the face value of the token, further decreasing their popularity. Another method that companies used was passbooks. These were ledgers that the company would keep and they would add the worker’s wages and then subtract any purchases that they made from the company store. This bypassed the need for paper scrip and was more common among smaller glassworks.All forms of company currency were outlawed in New Jersey in the late 1800s. Sources seem to attribute this to the devaluing of company currency and multiple strikes by glassworkers demanding to be paid in U.S. currency as it was more stable and worth more than the scrip currency.
Scrip currency helped to shape Glassboro. Glassboro was a company town and the use of scrip currency helped to maintain that. Workers were in essence trapped by the glassworks. Their money was only accepted at the company-owned store in town. While the store would have had everything that town residents would have needed, they would not have had the option to go anywhere else, thus being trapped by their money.