Tuesday, 7 of September of 2010

PUERTO RICO’S CURRENCY

CURRENCIES OF PUERTO RICO

puerto-rico-coinThe cur­ren­cies of Puerto Rico fol­lowed the devel­op­ment of the island closely.  It was granted the use of both Spain and the United Stated because it was a colony of both coun­tries.  Puerto Rico had its own gold, but by the 16th cen­tury, the arch­i­pel­ago was run­ning out of it.  And because of this, a ship­ment of gold from the Viceroy­alty of New Spain was sent to the island to pro­vide eco­nomic sup­port.  This was called the Situ­ado Mex­i­cano.  Unfor­tu­nately, the ship­ment wouldn’t arrive often and with the lack of com­mer­cial pros­per­ity, plus nat­ural con­di­tions and dis­as­ters, mul­ti­ply­ing the costs of main­tain­ing hacien­das dam­aged by hur­ri­canes the econ­omy suf­fered.   By 1766 Puerto Rico began pro­duc­ing ban­knotes becom­ing the first colony to print 8 real ban­knotes in the Span­ish Empire which put them ahead of Cuba, His­pan­iola and Spain by two decades.  These ban­knotes were used through­out the island while wait­ing for the situ­ado to be shipped.    When it arrived, the ban­knotes were paid back to the Span­ish Crown.

Dur­ing the 19th cen­tury, the situ­ado was dis­con­tin­ued because of Mex­ico gain­ing their inde­pen­dence from Spain, which cre­ated an eco­nomic cri­sis.  The Colo­nial Gov­er­nor in office, Sal­vador Melen­dez Bruna, ordered the issue of provin­cial ban­knotes, which cre­ated the Puerto Rican peso, but some­time after 1815, the notes were no longer printed.  Dur­ing the 1860’s and 1870’s the ban­knotes reemerged and on Feb­ru­ary 1, 1890, the Banco Espanol de Puerto Rico was inau­gu­rated and began issu­ing ban­knotes.  By 1895, a Royal Decree ordered the pro­duc­tion of provin­cial peso coins.

With the end of the Spanish-American War on August 13, 1898, Banco Espanol de Puerto Rico was renamed Bank of Porto Rico and issued bills equiv­a­lent to the United States dol­lar, cre­at­ing the Puerto Rican dol­lar.  After 1913, Puerto Rico’s econ­omy and mon­e­tary sys­tem was fully inte­grated into the United States’ eco­nomic and mon­e­tary sys­tem.  There was even a quar­ter coin designed with Fort San Felipe del Morro on the face of the coin.

Ban­knotes val­orized in mil­lions con­tin­ued in cir­cu­la­tion, thus a col­lect was ordered and held between Jan­u­ary 16 – 24, 1916.  The remain­ing bills, with an esti­mated value of $14,872 were taken out of cir­cu­la­tion nine years later by the Puerto Rico Com­mer­cial Bank.  Objects from Puerto Rico are con­stantly fea­tured in spe­cial­ized mag­a­zines, in both national and inter­na­tional dis­tri­b­u­tion.  Unfor­tu­nately, the Puerto Rican dol­lars that were col­lected by the gov­ern­ment, were burned between Jan­u­ary 16 – 24, 1925, dras­ti­cally reduc­ing the amount of sur­viv­ing notes from the Bank of Puerto Rico.  The Great Depres­sion reduced their num­ber fur­ther, since neces­sity pre­vented the col­lec­tion of pesos in large denom­i­na­tions.  Less than five exem­plars are known to exist of the 100 and 200 peso ban­knotes issued by El Banco Espanol de Puerto Rico and the 5 and 50 dol­lars Series F bills pub­lished by the Bank of Puerto Rico.

On July 10, 2005, the Lib­erty Dol­lar of Puerto Rico was intro­duced.  Sil­ver ounces began cir­cu­lat­ing on Octo­ber 8, 2005, mark­ing the first time that a sil­ver coin was dis­trib­uted in more than a cen­tury.  In Decem­ber, 2007, the United States Con­gress approved a mea­sure that included the Com­mon­wealth of Puerto Rico, Wash­ing­ton, D.C. and sev­eral non-autonomous ter­ri­to­ries includ­ing Amer­i­can Samoa, Guam and United States Vir­gin Islands in the 50 State Quar­ters pro­gram.  Both com­mon­wealths and ter­ri­to­ries were excluded from the orig­i­nal pro­gram approved in 1998, which was fol­lowed by almost ten years of lob­by­ing before they were included.  The design on these coins was expected to fea­ture the same George Wash­ing­ton image found in the obverse of the orig­i­nal issues, while the reverse would depict illus­tra­tions of some­thing char­ac­ter­is­tic to that loca­tion.  The Sec­re­tary of Trea­sury approved the design on July 31, 2008.  The coins were issued, as well as “proof coins” and 90% sil­ver spe­cial issues.  The Puerto Rico coin was the sec­ond release in 2009.  5cents


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