The penny in the United States is a
one-cent coin. Presently, the United
States Mint strikes about 12 billion pennies
annually, accounting for over onehalf
of all coins struck by the mint. If the
pennies struck by the U.S. Mint since its
inception were lined up edge to edge, the
pennies would roughly circle the earth
137 times (www.penny.org).
Historically, the penny was a copper
coin. Copper coinage came slowly to the
English-speaking countries, perhaps
because of its long association with currency
debasement. Early in the 17th century,
Spain had debased its silver coin
with copper alloy, eventually striking
coins that were virtually all copper with
face values commensurate with high silver
content. The prevailing opinion in
England was that only gold and silver met
the standard of a monetary metal. A shortage
of small change among tavern keepers
and tradesmen, however, prompted the
introduction of private tokens. To meet
the need for small change, the English
government in 1613 first struck copper
coins. Great Britain struck the first copper
pennies for home use in 1797.
In 1681 New Jersey sanctioned as legal
tender copper coins called Patrick’s
pence, after the Irishman who brought the
coins to the colonies. In 1722 the British
government authorized William Wood to
mint pennies and halfpence for Ireland
and the colonies. These pennies were a
mixture of copper, tin, and zinc, and had a
touch of silver. Under the Articles of Confederation,
several states established
mints that turned out copper coins.
The Coinage Act of 1792 established the cent
and the half-cent and set the weight of the
cent at 264 grains of copper. The act made
no provision for the actual coinage of
copper, and the legal tender provisions of
the act failed to mention copper coins.
Congress soon amended the act to provide
for the purchase of copper and for
necessary arrangements for the coinage of
copper cents and half-cents. Congress
also began to think of the copper coinage
as a fiduciary issue, and authorized the
president to substantially reduce the
copper weight of the cent and half-cent.
Congress also banned the circulation
of foreign copper coins, a restriction that
did not apply for foreign gold and silver
coins. The Spanish silver dollar circulated
as clearly legal tender currency
while the legal tender status of the copper
cents and half-cents remained in doubt.
After President Washington reduced the
copper content of the cent to 168 grains,
the coinage of cents and half-cents accelerated
as a profit-making venture.
In 1857, Congress substantially
increased the seigniorage on the copper
coins. It abolished the half-cent and
reduced the weight of the one-cent coin
to 72 grains with 88 percent copper and
12 percent nickel. In 1864, Congress
again changed the composition of the
cent, raising the copper content to
95 percent with the remaining 5 percent
zinc. Congress also made the one-cent
coin legal tender.
In 1909, to mark the 100th year since
his birth, Abraham Lincoln became the first historical figure to adorn a United
States coin. Fifty years later, an image of
the Lincoln Memorial appeared on the
reverse side, and today both sides of the
penny commemorate Abraham Lincoln.
In 2009, the U.S. Mint will issue four different
one-cent coins to commemorate
the 200th anniversary of President
Lincoln’s birth and the 100th anniversary
of the production of the Lincoln cent.
Rising copper prices in the 1970s
caused a shortage of pennies, then worth
more as copper than as money. Pennies
were melted down for copper, and to
keep pennies in circulation the government
reduced the penny’s copper content
to 2.5 percent, the remaining
97.5 percent was composed of zinc.
In the first decade of the new century,
the penny’s future stands somewhat uncertain.
Inflated price levels may have made
the penny coin obsolete, but proposals to
discontinue the penny have not met with
widespread approval. State and local governments
claim the penny plays a needed
role in the collection of sales taxes applied
at percentage rates. Consumer groups
claim abolishing the penny will mean that
prices will be rounded up a nickel instead
of a penny, leading to higher prices.
Opponents of the penny cite its insignificant
purchasing power, and the time and
resources that households and businesses
put into managing pennies. In 2001 and
2006, bills came up in Congress to stop
production of the penny, but the bills
failed to pass. The U.S. Mint contends that
coinage of the penny is profitable to the
government, and other large major industrialized
countries, including Great
Britain, Canada, Japan, Germany, France,
and Italy, have kept the penny, or penny
equivalents, in production. Australia and
New Zealand have removed their penny
equivalent from circulation.