The Neighborhood Mint - Dahlonega in the Age of Jackson
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May 5, 2000
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ISBN-13: 9780967976907
ISBN-10: 0967976901
About this book
The first major gold rush in the United States occurred not in California in 1848 but in north Georgia in the 1820s. The discovery of rich deposits of gold in the Cherokee Nation later to become North Georgia combined with the peculiar politics of the era to prompt the establishment of a branch mint in Dahlonega Georgia. Then miners were able to bring their gold to the mint have it assayed and receive gold coins in return. The story of the mint - its establishment construction operations failures and eventual closing - is a fascinating one full of conflict and a compelling cast of characters. But this account of the U.S. Branch Mint in Dahlonega Georgia is much more than a fascinating story. The cast of characters was involved in a much larger drama. The events surrounding the establishment and operation of the mint reflect the social political and economic history of the antebellum United States. In Dahlonega Georgia as elsewhere during the Age of Jackson the social political and economic equality for which the age is so noted was more hoped for than real. The U.S. Branch Mint in Dahlonega Georgia pleased few people besides those who were fortunate enough to get jobs there. It never coined enough gold to serve the purpose for which it was created - the relief of the nations chronic shortage of coin. So the director of the U.S. Mint at Philadelphia the parent U.S. Mint charged that it was merely a "neighborhood mint." Residents of Dahlonega Georgia complained that it was not a neighborhood institution; they had no control over the appointments to its offices. Even those who did secure employment in the mint must have wondered at times just how fortunate they were when they had to defend themselves against all kinds of charges from people who were after their jobs. The Dahlonega Branch Mint closed in 1861 a victim of the Civil War and was never reopened. But coins bearing the mint mark "D" have become collectors items in the twentieth century. In a story full of irony that is the final one for with all the obstacles that faced those who operated the mint it is something of a miracle that coins perfect enough for circulation were produced there are all. The authors sensitivity to historical ironies and their careful and exhaustive use of rare primary source materials make this a useful book for all professional historians. But it is a book for everyone to enjoy. Its compelling narrative its development of characters its sense of humor its lively quotations from the correspondence of the period and it constant attention to conflict in the community combine to make reading the book a pleasure as well as a profit.