Cut Coin - Very Long
Taken and modified from ......" Report on Excavation at the Bethabara, Forsyth County, North Carolina ......
Most of the artifacts recovered here are not reliable temporalmarkers. One exception is the cut coin. The corroded portion of the coin, roughly one-quarter of the original, was determined to be part of a United States Large Cent. It is apparent that the original coin was cut. Matching the cut coin with an illustration of a Large Cent revealed that it was a Coronet Type Large Cent, produced between1816 and 1857.
The practice of cutting coins into pieces typically is associated with the Spanish silver dollar, commonly known as "pieces of eight." Minted in Spain and the New World, the peso, as it later became known, was accepted worldwide because its supply was greater and the quality better than the coins of most other nations at the time (Massey 1968:35). Fractional currency was created by cutting the peso into as many as eight pieces, each piece being referred to as a real ("royal money"), or "bit." Half of a peso was called four bits, a quarter peso was two bits, etc. So influential was the Spanish peso in the United States that the U.S. Mint designed a silver dollar of similar size and value(Massey 1968:3

. The term "bit" also was retained in popular language when referring to a quarter of a U.S. dollar (2 bits) and a half dollar (4 bits). The Spanish silver dollar remained a viable type of currency in the U.S. until 1857 when the government declared that all foreign coins could no longer be used as legal tender (Davis 1971:269).
A general view of the historical and economic climate of the period between 1816 and 1857, however, may yield some insight into the reasoning behind cutting a coin.
The production capabilities of the U.S. Mints advanced in the 1830's, yet due to historical circumstances the amount of coins circulating during this period did not increase as much as had been anticipated. In his fight against the Second Bank of the United States (BUS), President Andrew Jackson withdrew much of the federal money safeguarded in the BUS and deposited it in state banks. State banks soon proliferated across the entire nation. Unregulated by the government, they printed their own bank notes and provided loans, many for the purchase of western lands (Wiltse 1961:149). Much of the hard money produced never circulated outside the state banks since it was needed to back up their bank notes.
In 1836, Jackson signed the Specie Circular to discourage speculation in western lands, to reduce dependence on bank notesand credit (Rossiter 1971:230), and to slow down the growth of the nation. It declared that land offices could only accept gold and
silver for purchases of land, thus causing people to withdraw much of the surplus specie (coins) banks maintained to back up their
notes. However, land was still bought and sold from speculators with bank paper. The pressure to provide loans was too great and
many state banks were forced to foreclose because they could not redeem their notes in specie(coins)(Patton 1993:6). Foreclosures
invalidated any of that bank's paper still in circulation. Hoarding of coins became common since no one wanted to surrender guaranteed
money.
The Specie Circular also affected international trade and eventually led to the failure of many American brokers. Panicky depositors in New York withdrew over a million dollars in gold and silver from their banks, which forced the banks to stop payment in specie (coins)(Wiltse 1961:153). Other banks across the U.S. followed, thereby increasing the hoarding and scarcity of coins. Banks cut loan periods short, and put pressure on business people to pay their debts sooner. The Panic of 1837 began to take its toll. Coins were so scarce that "hard times" tokens were issued by private individuals. The pieces resembled cents and passed for that amount. After this period Large Cent pieces fell into public disfavor and were soon replaced with a smaller version in 1857.
It is not surprising to read that the national depression following the Panic of 1837 affected many communities. In the 1840's a "critical lack of cash and the current low prices of various provisions and essentials" made times tougher. Many businessmen, supplemented their own income through "secret trading