Monetary History of the United States, 1867-1960
Average customer rating: 4 out of 5 stars
  • One of the Top-10 Economics Books
  • A tremendous amount of work combined with a misspecified model
  • Classic in the canon of economic theory
  • Hard to read, only for economists or wannabe economists
  • Negative Review Missed the Very Point of the Book
Monetary History of the United States, 1867-1960
Milton Friedman , and Anna Jacobson Schwartz
Manufacturer: Princeton University Press
ProductGroup: Book
Binding: Paperback

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ASIN: 0691003548

Book Description

Writing in the June 1965 issue of theEconomic Journal, Harry G. Johnson begins with a sentence seemingly calibrated to the scale of the book he set himself to review: "The long-awaited monetary history of the United States by Friedman and Schwartz is in every sense of the term a monumental scholarly achievement--monumental in its sheer bulk, monumental in the definitiveness of its treatment of innumerable issues, large and small . . . monumental, above all, in the theoretical and statistical effort and ingenuity that have been brought to bear on the solution of complex and subtle economic issues."

Friedman and Schwartz marshaled massive historical data and sharp analytics to support the claim that monetary policy--steady control of the money supply--matters profoundly in the management of the nation's economy, especially in navigating serious economic fluctuations. In their influential chapter 7, The Great Contraction--which Princeton published in 1965 as a separate paperback--they address the central economic event of the century, the Depression. According to Hugh Rockoff, writing in January 1965: "If Great Depressions could be prevented through timely actions by the monetary authority (or by a monetary rule), as Friedman and Schwartz had contended, then the case for market economies was measurably stronger."

Milton Friedman won the Nobel Prize in Economics in 2000 for work related to A Monetary History as well as to his other Princeton University Press book, A Theory of the Consumption Function (1957).

Customer Reviews:

5 out of 5 stars One of the Top-10 Economics Books.......2006-03-26

MV=PQ (and other variations)

Monetary History of the United States is one of the greatest and most historic economics book written. Milton Friedman won the Nobel Prize in economics for this masterwork. It revolutionized economics. The only other book that is better is The Wealth of Nations by Adam Smith. I highly recommend both books.

At the time Monetary History was published, monetary economics had fallen out of favor because of the Great Depression. Economists had thought that monetary forces were ineffective as stimulating the economy in a severe downturn. The phrase "pushing up on a string" became famous. That led to the belief that government intervention of fiscal policy was needed to keep the economy stable.

Friedman and Schwartz turned that upside down by proving beyond a doubt that monetary forces caused the Great Depression, caused the recovery under Franklin Roosevelt, caused the recession of 1937-38, caused the recovery after the recession, and caused everything else in American history.

Monetary History has never been effectively refuted. It stands unrivaled.

Liberals used to credit Roosevelt for pulling America out of the Great Depression, and the complete statistics do show a strong recovery from 1933 to 1938 and from 1939 onward. Friedman showed that most Roosevelt policies had nothing to do with the recovery. What Roosevelt did right was to remove America from the gold standard and save the banking industry. Monetary history shows that this stopped the monetary contraction and led to an increase in the money supply, but nobody fully understood that at the time.

Some Roosevelt policies for commonsense stability, like the SEC and FHA, and investments, like the GI Bill and infrastructive developments (long part of American economic history), were good. But many Roosevelt policies were a waste of money and had no effect at all on the economy.

Likewise, the recent claims that Roosevelt hurt business confidence and prolonged the Great Depression are unfounded. Friedman and Scwartz showed conclusively, and with several different tests from different approaches, that the recession of 1937-38 is completely explained by a contraction of the money supply by the Federal Reserve. Labor unrest and other factors that could affect busines confidence were completely irrelevant, and this book completely disproves it. Monetary forces completely explain the Great Depression and the rest of American economic history.

Don't believe the political pundits one way or the other. Monetary History is the answer.

Friedman argued that a steady monetary policy could maintain a steady economy, and he argued this when nobody believed him. Now this is widely accepted. Today the Federal Reserve Bank used monetary policy to keep the economy steady.

I highly recommend Monetary History. I also highly recommend the more updated Essays on the Great Depression by Ben Bernanke, the Chairman of the Federal Reserve. The Great Depression is the ultimate riddle and both Friedman and Schwartz, and Bernanke understand it.

4 out of 5 stars A tremendous amount of work combined with a misspecified model.......2005-09-18

Friedman and Schwartz(1963)did a great deal of worthwhile data compilation.The problem(an identical problem occurs in the 1956 work of Philip Cagan) occurs when they attempt to fit the data to the standard quantity of exchange equation MV=PO,where M is the supply of money(Friedman always selects MI to be equal to M),V is the velocity,P is the price level,O is real GNP(GDP),and PO is nominal GNP(GDP).The correct specification of the equation of exchange is M(Vw)=PO,where w is defined on the unit interval between 0 and 1.w is Keynes's measure of the weight of the evidence or Ellsberg's (rho)measure of the confidence a decision maker has in the information set he will use to calculate the probabilities of different outcomes.Friedman is a lifelong adherent and advocate of the Ramsey-De Finetti-Savage subjective approach to probability which argues that ,while the existence of vagueness(J M Keynes's weight of the A Treatise on Probability(uncertainty of the General Theory) or Ellsberg's ambiguity)is undeniable,it can't be modeled in a decision theoretic context.Only risk,represented by a normal probability distribution and its mean+ or- 3 standard deviations,can be operationalized.Friedman's section 4 of chapter 12,titled "Expectations about Stability ",discusses exactly what Savage called vagueness,Keynes called uncertainty,liquidity preference being a function of uncertainty AND NOT RISK,AND ELLSBERG CALLED AMBIGUITY.Friedman has no variable in his model to deal with it.He admits this on the second paragraph of p.675.Friedman's analysis abstracts from the role that expectations,confidence,uncertainty,and the flexibility of money(Keynes's liquidity preference)play in the demand for money .All of the Friedman-Schwartz analysis needs to be redone using the correct specification of the equation of exchange.Friedman's existing specification only holds in the special case where w=1.0,i.e.,that there is no uncertainty,ambiguity,or vagueness. MV=PO is a correct specification of the equation of exchange only if risk,measured by the normal probability distribution's standard deviation(or the standard deviation divided by the mean),is the only decision theoretic variable.All current forms of the equation of exchange ignore ambiguity and/or uncertainty and conflate risk with uncertainty.The equation of exchange has been misspecified from Hume to Friedman and Lucas.Only Keynes correctly derived a generalized equation of exchange.Keynes's analysis is contained on p.209 and chapter 21 of the GT.Lucas has already admitted that his framework of analysis breaks down completely if Keynesian uncertainty or Ellsbergian ambiguity prevents him from using his normal probability distribution.The massive 50 plus years of statistical analysis by Benoit Mandelbrot of data from all financial markets(stock,money,commodities,futures,currencies,bond) provides overwhelming empirical support for not using the normal distribution.Keynes,of course,would agree that, if the only decision theoretic variable of consequence is risk(Mandelbrot's mild risk),velocity would be stable or predictable.The fact that velocity is not constant or predictable means that Friedman's monetarism is only a very special case of Keynes's general theory,which,in terms of Mandelbrot's definitions,deals with mild and wild risk.Friedman can only deal with mild risk.

5 out of 5 stars Classic in the canon of economic theory.......2005-03-08

Milton Friedman and Anna J. Schwartz' A Monetary History of the United States, 1867-1960 is an analysis and explanation of the Great Depression of the 1930s. Its conclusion, first published in the early 1960s, differs from the two main explanations that existed at the time.

Austrian Business Cycle Theory had argued that the Great Depression was caused by excessively loose monetary policy that fed an unsustainable economic boom during the 1920s, which eventually collapsed into depression. Friedman and Schwartz argued that instead it was excessively tight monetary policy following the boom of the 1920s that turned a run-of-the-mill recession into a depression. (For the Austrian explanation of the Great Depression, see Sir Lionel Robbins' The Great Depression or Murray Rothbard's America's Great Depression.)

Keynesianism argued that the Great Depression had been caused by insufficient consumer product demand and lack of investor confidence, and that government should compensate for this by increasing its spending and financing it with government debt. Friedman and Schwartz argued instead that the problem and solution were not so much a matter of fiscal policy as they were a matter of monetary policy. Government, particularly the monetary authorities, was the cause of the depression, not the solution. Stimulative fiscal policy as prescribed by Keynes would in the long run not lead to an increase in economic growth and employment, but only to an increase in inflation. (For the Keynesian explanation of the Great Depression, see John M. Keynes's The General Theory of Employment, Interest and Money or John Kenneth Galbraith's The Great Crash, 1929.)

At the time of its publication, A Monetary History was not immediately accepted by the economics profession, which then was still dominated by Keynesian thinking. But when Keynesian theory could not explain the stagflation (recession combined with high inflation) of the 1970s, monetarism came to rule the day, and Friedman would go on to win the 1976 Nobel Prize in Economics.

Friedman and Schwartz's analysis has by now become the standard explanation for the Great Depression. In the very least, the book helped reestablish the importance of monetary over fiscal policy in the stabilization of the business cycle. Money matters, even if it is not the only thing that matters. In addition, the importance of the book was methodological, in that it emphasized the importance of the empirical testing of one's economic propositions. What makes the book so persuasive is the great lengths to which the authors go to sort out the causation behind the correlation-the causation, they found, ran from money to output and prices rather than vice versa or via a fourth variable.

A Monetary History is a classic work in the canon of economic literature. It is on occasion still reviewed in the literature (e.g. Journal of Monetary Economics, August 1994; Cato Journal, Winter 2004). It clearly is an academic work written for trained economists, making it perhaps less accessible to a general audience. But several highly readable summary versions of the book exist, such as chapter 3 of Milton and Rose Friedman's Free to Choose, and even a one-paragraph summary conclusion in Capitalism and Freedom (on p. 45 of the paperback edition), which was published around the same time as A Monetary History. Alternatively, ch. 13 ("A Summing Up", pp. 676-700) is reprinted in The Essence of Friedman.

1 out of 5 stars Hard to read, only for economists or wannabe economists.......2004-12-10

I hated this book because it's hard to read. I don't like wading through sentences as long as paragraphs full of obscure words that require a dictionary nearby.

I just wanted to get a general understanding of money and the Federal Reserve from a source I trust and admire - Milton Friedman. I don't mind facts and figures but I resent writing that forces me into hard labor to decipher the meaning. I think good writing is communicating in the simplest way possible, not in trying to impress the reader with the author's vocabulary and ability to construct impenetrable, wannabe-sophisticated, long, compound sentences.

Don't get me wrong, I'm an engineer and I've got a decent vocabulary and fairly decent language skills.

I've found the books by Murray N. Rothbard to be much easier to read than this book though not as easy to read as I would like. I'm still looking for the perfect monetary history/economics book. I hope there's one out there somewhere.

5 out of 5 stars Negative Review Missed the Very Point of the Book.......2003-08-21

I read the reviews and found them helpful, but the unnamed reviewer that attributed the Great Depression to causes totally other than this book cites, and bashed Friedman as "not having a leg to stand on" concerned me because it seems the reviewer missed the very point of the book. Nobel prize winning economist Milton Friedman and his co-author undertook the monumental work of tracing money supply for each year for nearly a century. In doing so, they did the staggering amount of work required to show all of us something very powerful. To say they don't have a leg to stand on is disconcerting because it seems to indicate a review without a reading, or at least understanding. Obviously the Great Depression was the result of of complex interactions within the economy. What Friedman tries to do is show us the EMPIRICAL evidence for interaction between a contracting money supply and a worsening economic situation, and a steady money supply and a bettering economic situation. The Great Depression may have come about because of arrogant decisions and cascading failures, and those who decided to contract the money supply evidently were a very important trigger. I can say "evidently" because Friedman's research gives us the chance to observe the evidence for ourselves. To have advanced our knowledge of economics in a practical way, to have given useful facts for fending off depressions, is a gift. That's why this book will remain a watershed work in the history of economics.
100 Greatest American Currency Notes: The Stories Behind The Most Colonial, Confederate, Federal, Obsolete, and Private American Notes
Average customer rating: 5 out of 5 stars
  • 100 Greatest American Currency Notes
  • Is as expected but have not proof read it to date
  • Simple & Informative Book
  • A Rare Book
100 Greatest American Currency Notes: The Stories Behind The Most Colonial, Confederate, Federal, Obsolete, and Private American Notes
Q. David Bowers , and David M. Sundman
Manufacturer: Whitman Publishing
ProductGroup: Book
Binding: Hardcover

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ASIN: 0794820069

Product Description

In this beautifully illustrated book, two of America’s best-known numismatists take the reader on a personal guided tour of our nation’s greatest currency notes. They’re all inside: the Lazy Deuce, the Tombstone Note, the Buffalo Bill, and more. You’ll see some familiar faces, such as Abraham Lincoln, George Washington, and even Santa Claus... and meet some unique and colorful characters like the mad Emperor Norton. Battleships and locomotives, Army officers and Indians, politicians and polar bears—all these and more await you among the 100 Greatest American Currency Notes. By Q.David Bowers and David M. Sundman. Forward by Chester Krause and Clifford Mishler

Customer Reviews:

5 out of 5 stars 100 Greatest American Currency Notes.......2007-03-21

This is an incredible book to have in your library if your a collector of U.S. Paper Currency or not. Stunning pictures of each of the notes this book goes into great detail in discussing. I have this book and the 100 Greatest U.S. Coins book sitting out in my livingroom for all to see and everyone who has stopped by can not help but pick up these books. Then the oh's and ah's start pouring out !!! Absolute incredible book to have in anyone's private library without a doubt.

4 out of 5 stars Is as expected but have not proof read it to date.......2007-01-10

CS:

I received this book and believe it is as expected. Price is at FMV (Fair Market Value). I have not yet proof read it but what I have seen it makes a great reference for those who collect currency. However, it would have been helpful to include the Friedberg number in the Appendix along with the description. Yes, this number can be variable but you have included prices that are also variable and approximate. It may have been better to give a ratio(range)year column price divided by the face value of the currency.

5 out of 5 stars Simple & Informative Book.......2007-01-05

This book was exactly what I expected. Good photos and stories behind 100 of the most famous notes in history. Great as a reference or as a coffe table book.

5 out of 5 stars A Rare Book.......2006-09-11

It is the rare numismatic book that is educational AND entertaining. This book is one of those rare books.
I wrote a review of this book for the Bank Note Reporter, the newpaper for collectors of paper money. I have included an only slightly altered version of that review below.

My best purchase at the Chicago Paper Money Exposition was a copy of the new book 100 Greatest American Currency Notes by two of my favorite numismatists--Q. David Bowers and David M. Sundman. Chet Krause and Cliff Mishler wrote a foreword for the book making that four of my favorites all in one book. No, that is not right. Tom Denly was something called valuations editor for the book so that makes five of my favorite--and greatest--numismatists all in one volume.
In short, the book is beautiful to behold and a joy to read. That sums it up quite nicely, but I do have a lot more to say about it. I feel that I am particularly qualified to do this because I had started a book with exactly the same premise. I still have my notebook with my work. That means that they stole my idea! Of course that is easy to say after they have completed their work and I only have a notebook. It is also untrue. The original idea was Jeff Garrett and Ron Guth's popular 100 Greatest American Coins. Imitation is indeed the sincerest form of flattery. I must also say that Bowers and Sundman did a far better job than I would have done (not that I did not have a few enhancements).
The basic premise of the book is to select and discuss the 100 greatest American notes. The authors have done this admirably. The basic methodology was to survey a wide group of dealers asking them to list what they considered to be the top notes. While the methodology was good and the results were great, my first complaint is that I would have liked to have learned more about the methodology. The authors tabulated the results then provided the discussion. As the creators of this project, they have a greater insight than anyone on the subject. I would at a minimum have liked to read more of their thoughts on the results, but these are small complaints.
If you have not seen the book you can cast a silent vote right now for your top note or top ten. Now that you have done that, you will probably not be surprised that the clear favorite of the survey was the "Grand watermelon" ($1000 Series 1890 Silver Certificate). The authors expected it to be number one and I had it number one in the notes for my book. You have to figure that a note with a nickname like that would come in first or to look at it the other way that a note worthy of being first would have a nick name. Indeed, nine of the top ten have nicknames.
Two pages are devoted to discussing the grand watermelon and each of the top ten notes. Thereafter it is one page per note. This is the meat of the book. Indeed, the book could just as easily have been something like 100 Great Paper Money Stories.
The two Davids excelled in the preparation of the text to describe the notes. They supplemented the illustrations of the notes and their discussions with additional illustrations (some of these of coins (gasp)). Most ot these are excellent and some are great in both content and quality. They are a highlight of the book. This seems to be an appropriate place to mention the superb quality of book production. It is color throughout and truly excellent. My one complaint is that the book is in a large format 10 x 12 inches. Many people will consider this a feature. Authors (including me) like these large formats, but they are harder to read. They look great on the coffee table, but are difficult to handle curled up in a chair or in an airline torture seat.
I did not know that the watermelon description of this note could be traced back to an 1891 newspaper story. Perhaps I had read this before, but if I had, I had forgotten it. The entire quotation from the paper is included. From the footnotes at the back of the book I learned this interesting tidbit. The quotation is "From an 1891 clipping, no day date, in a scrapbook compiled in 1891 and 1892 (now owned by Q. David Bowers)." I found many of the notes worth reading.
Each entry includes a box with "historic Market Values" and "Commentary on Value." This is the work of the valuations editor. This book is not a catalog of values (I like that), but the inclusion of this information is interesting in its own right and is nice balances with the text and graphics. When I was working on my project, I had not thought of anything like this.
Number two in the survey is the $500 national bank note. It is a good and obvious choice. It was also number two on my list.
The third note in the survey is Massachusetts Bay Colony 5-shilling notes of December 10, 1690. It is the first government-issue American paper money (according to Eric Newman). Among other interesting (amazing) things that I learned in this entry is that in the 17th century the annual calendar ran from March 25 to March 24. I also learned that the unique example of this note resides in the Essex Institute, Salem, Massachusetts. That is certainly an appropriate city. I wonder if the note is on public display.
The balance of the top ten are very interesting indeed. Instead of being great rarities they are dominated by relatively common notes and certainly are affordable in circulated grades to most collectors. The one exception is number eight, the "Spread Eagle Note" (Series of 1862 and 1863 $100 Legal Tender note).
The others are respectively in positions four though ten (except eight): Lazy Deuce ($2 National Bank Note), $5 Educational note (Series of 1896 Silver Certificate), and Bison Note" (Series of 1891 $10 Legal Tender note), $1 "Educational Note (Series of 1896 Silver Certificate," $20 "Technicolor note" (Series of 1905 Gold Certificate, and the "Indian Chief" (Series of 1899 $5 Silver Certificate).
The other ninety notes include a wide array of interesting and historical notes. The entry on every single one is worth studying, but to me the most interesting (especially for discussion here) are those that might not be obvious choices.
United States fractional notes get two entries on the list. Interestingly, number 14, the fractional currency shield, is not a note at all, but a virtual collection of notes. Having said, that I think that it is a good choice.
Four Confederate notes make the list with several of them having nicknames (the Indian Princess and Montgomery notes (two denominations making the list)).
That vast, amorphous, and ill defined area known as obsolete notes are also included. Numbers 23 and 24 are Santa Clause notes and polar bear notes even though they are more categories than actual notes. Again, I think that they were good choices.
I was pleased and even a little surprised to see both World War II issues (Hawaii and North Africa) make the top 100. They won their places because of their extraordinary historical reasons for issue.
These various categories of notes included in the book are the apparent reason for the awkward book title. I offer this criticism with respect because I struggled with this problem in my unversion of this book. If you say United States notes you probably should not include Confederate notes. Colonial and Continental notes would not really fit. "Obsolete" notes would be in doubt too. Even American notes (as chosen) presents some problems. Does American include Canada? Mexico? I do not like the term currency notes, but I understand the problem. Bank notes does not fit because most of the notes selected were not issued by banks under any definition. Many people (unfortunately) would simply say currency but that is a very bad choice because currency is coins and paper money. In most constructions paper money does not work (100 Greatest American Paper Money). Even notes has some problems. Certainly, national bank notes are notes. but are silver and gold certificates notes? In the final analysis, having said that I do not like what we was used, but I do not have a better title.
I love the book, but I disagree with some of the choices. That is one of the wonderful aspects of books of lists. They are certain to generate discussion if not controversy. I was surprised that no error or star notes made the list. I can understand that they can be excluded as being sort of varieties of other issues, but, still, I think that a token from either or both of these categories could have been included.
You will probably not be surprised that I think that a military payment certificate should have been on the list. Having said that, I should be prepared to tell you which one. I gave that considerable thought in my work. I considered the unknown replacements and the unique replacements. Of course there is the Series 541 $5 with its attractive design and world record price history. I thought about the unique specimen booklets for Series 541 and 591. I really liked them because they have nicknames ("Comptroller Booklets"). Finally, I decided that the best choice would be the unique specimen and progressive proof set of Series 661. It does not have a widely recognized nickname, but it is still a good choice. I had a brief exchange with Tom Denly on this very subject after drafting this review. He said that he thought that if an MPC were to be included, it should be something like a Series 692 $10 or $20 because they would be very recognizable and would also be collectible. I like his thinking!
There are other good features good features of the book that I have not mentioned. The formatter is all quite good. You can imagine my surprise at finding my name mentioned. Earning that honor as an old timer (my term) is a double edged honor. The selected bibliography and recap of the top 100 in an appendix are also useful.
I expect that this will be a very successful book, just as the Garrett-Guth version on coins was. Can it generate more spinoffs like the 100 Greatest World Notes, or even the 100 Greatest National Bank Notes? I doubt it, but I would love to have both of those in my own library.
If it is not obvious, I highly recommend 100 Greatest American Currency Notes by Q. David Bowers and David Sundman. It was published by Whitman Publishing and should be available wherever numismatic books are sold and even in many book stores at around $30.
When Washington Shut Down Wall Street: The Great Financial Crisis of 1914 and the Origins of America's Monetary Supremacy
Average customer rating: 5 out of 5 stars
  • Great read
  • Fascinating history of how the U.S. became the world's financial leader
When Washington Shut Down Wall Street: The Great Financial Crisis of 1914 and the Origins of America's Monetary Supremacy
William L. Silber
Manufacturer: Princeton University Press
ProductGroup: Book
Binding: Hardcover

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Book Description

When Washington Shut Down Wall Street unfolds like a mystery story. It traces Treasury Secretary William Gibbs McAdoo's triumph over a monetary crisis at the outbreak of World War I that threatened the United States with financial disaster. The biggest gold outflow in a generation imperiled America's ability to repay its debts abroad. Fear that the United States would abandon the gold standard sent the dollar plummeting on world markets. Without a central bank in the summer of 1914, the United States resembled a headless financial giant.

William McAdoo stepped in with courageous action, we read in Silber's gripping account. He shut the New York Stock Exchange for more than four months to prevent Europeans from selling their American securities and demanding gold in return. He smothered the country with emergency currency to prevent a replay of the bank runs that swept America in 1907. And he launched the United States as a world monetary power by honoring America's commitment to the gold standard. His actions provide a blueprint for crisis control that merits attention today. McAdoo's recipe emphasizes an exit strategy that allows policymakers to throttle a crisis while minimizing collateral damage.

When Washington Shut Down Wall Street recreates the drama of America's battle for financial credibility. McAdoo's accomplishments place him alongside Paul Volcker and Alan Greenspan as great American financial leaders. McAdoo, in fact, nursed the Federal Reserve into existence as the 1914 crisis waned and served as the first chairman of the Federal Reserve Board.

Customer Reviews:

5 out of 5 stars Great read.......2007-08-30

This book is a great read. The topic is fascinating (to me, at least). Some of the material is a bit intricate, but the author does a great job of explaining it. He liberally uses footnotes to explain details which to an economist might be pedestrian but to a lay person such as myself are not obvious. (One ongoing topic is the exchange rate between pounds sterling and dollars, and how that relates to the price of gold and the cost of shipping gold between the UK and the US. He does a great job of walking the reader through the process and the arithmetic.) I highly recommend this book, and particularly recommend it to anyone who wonders what the Federal Reserve Board really does.

5 out of 5 stars Fascinating history of how the U.S. became the world's financial leader.......2007-03-30

In Kazuo Ishiguro's novel The Remains of the Day, a blue-blood guest unmercifully grills James Stevens, the head butler at an English estate. The pompous guest is trying to demonstrate that uneducated people should not have the vote. "My good man," he asks, "do you suppose the debt situation regarding America is a significant factor in the present low levels of trade? Or...is the abandonment of the gold standard...at the root of the matter?" Stevens, aware that the question is meant only to baffle him, replies that he has no idea. Poor Stevens! Anyone without a degree in international finance would have an equally difficult time answering such an abstruse question. That's why this intriguing business history book by William L. Silber is so worthwhile: He brings global finance to life by spotlighting America's 1914 money crisis and by explaining how then-U.S. Treasury Secretary William McAdoo used this portentous episode to establish the nation's financial supremacy. We suggest you read this illuminating work of economic history to understand the seminal events that established U.S. monetary policy.
The New York Times Guide to Coin Collecting: Do's, Don'ts, Facts, Myths, and a Wealth of History
Average customer rating: 4 out of 5 stars
  • I did not get it from the library...
  • check it out from the library instead
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Manufacturer: St. Martin's Griffin
ProductGroup: Book
Binding: Paperback

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  4. The One-Minute Coin Expert, Edition #5 (One Minute Coin Expert) The One-Minute Coin Expert, Edition #5 (One Minute Coin Expert)
  5. The Official Guide to Coin Grading and Counterfeit Detection Edition #2 (Official Guide to Coin Grading and Counterfeit Detection) The Official Guide to Coin Grading and Counterfeit Detection Edition #2 (Official Guide to Coin Grading and Counterfeit Detection)

ASIN: 0312291264

Book Description

Every coin collector has to start somewherenow The New York Times provides a wealth of information in one concise yet definitive volume. Every aspect is covered, from the history and origins of coins to the ins and outs of professional and hobbyist collecting. Topics include: How coins are made A history of striking techniques, and a look at the U.S. Mint todayS Coin grading: what to look for, and how to obtain professional certified grading Where to buy them: the Internet, coin shops, auctions, and places to find great deals How to properly care for a coin collection The whole spectrum of collectible coins, from novelty items and childrens coin collections to high-end, extremely rare collections.Additional features include profiles of ten historic U.S. coins, a glossary of coin terms, and a detailed bibliography of essential reading. For both seasoned coin collectors and young readers who just picked up their first Statehood Quarter, this book is bound to prove more valuable than a rare mint.

Customer Reviews:

5 out of 5 stars I did not get it from the library..........2007-09-28

...and found it to be excellent, it is THE definitive coin book INHO. And is most certainly not short on details. As for the two grading services...they are absolute industry standards, of course they are the ones discussed. To tell prospective purchasers to "get the book from the library instead" is...well I found such advice to be unpleasant.

3 out of 5 stars check it out from the library instead.......2005-07-08

I'm new to coin collecting so I think I'm probably the target audience. Although he covered a lot of ground, I felt it was quite short on detail. For example, he really only examines 2 of the grading services, so I still don't know how all the others compare. I'd borrow it, enjoy the easy to read style, take a few notes, and then spend my money on an other one. Which one, I don't know.
A Guide Book of Shield And Liberty Head Nickels: Complete Source For History, Grading, and Prices (The Official Red Book)
Average customer rating: Not rated
    A Guide Book of Shield And Liberty Head Nickels: Complete Source For History, Grading, and Prices (The Official Red Book)
    Q. David Bowers
    Manufacturer: Whitman Publishing
    ProductGroup: Book
    Binding: Paperback

    CriticismCriticism | Architecture | Professional & Technical | Subjects | Books
    GeneralGeneral | Architecture | Professional & Technical | Subjects | Books
    Coins & MedalsCoins & Medals | Antiques & Collectibles | Home & Garden | Subjects | Books
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    1. The Official Red Book: a Guide Book of Indian And Flying Eagle Cents (Official Red Book) The Official Red Book: a Guide Book of Indian And Flying Eagle Cents (Official Red Book)
    2. The Official Red Book a Guide Book of Buffalo and Jefferson Nickels: Complete Source for History, Grading, and Values (Official Red Book) The Official Red Book a Guide Book of Buffalo and Jefferson Nickels: Complete Source for History, Grading, and Values (Official Red Book)
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    ASIN: 0794819214
    Double Eagle: The Epic Story of the World's Most Valuable Coin
    Average customer rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    • Wonderful story
    • a breathtaking read
    • Who knew?
    • Gripping, factual and extraodinarily well written.
    • This Real-Life Detective Story Is On the Money!
    Double Eagle: The Epic Story of the World's Most Valuable Coin
    Alison Frankel
    Manufacturer: W. W. Norton
    ProductGroup: Book
    Binding: Hardcover

    GeneralGeneral | 20th Century | United States | Americas | History | Subjects | Books
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    Coins & MedalsCoins & Medals | Antiques & Collectibles | Home & Garden | Subjects | Books
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    1. Illegal Tender: Gold, Greed, and the Mystery of the Lost 1933 Double Eagle Illegal Tender: Gold, Greed, and the Mystery of the Lost 1933 Double Eagle
    2. A guide Book of Double Eagle Gold Coins: A Complete History and Price Guide A guide Book of Double Eagle Gold Coins: A Complete History and Price Guide
    3. Million Dollar Nickels: Mysteries of the 1913 Liberty Head Nickels Revealed... Million Dollar Nickels: Mysteries of the 1913 Liberty Head Nickels Revealed...
    4. 100 Greatest U.S. Coins 100 Greatest U.S. Coins
    5. The Double Eagle The Double Eagle

    ASIN: 0393059499

    Book Description

    Few objects in history tell a tale that can match this one coin's for drama and sheer improbability.

    Stolen from the U.S. Mint in the depths of the Great Depression, shipped via diplomatic pouch to Egypt, hidden for forty years, seized in a 1996 government sting at the Waldorf-Astoria, and finally sold in a record-setting auction….

    One coin, for years the only known 1933 twenty-dollar Double Eagle in the world, has inspired the passions of thieves and collectors, lawyers and charlatans. Its extraordinary story winds across seventy years and three continents, linking an almost unbelievable cast of characters: Theodore Roosevelt and a Philadelphia gold dealer with underworld connections; Egypt's King Farouk and an apple-cheeked Secret Service agent; London's most successful coin dealer and a retired trucker from Amarillo.

    Alison Frankel's stylish narrative hums at the pace of a thriller. Her meticulously researched descriptions and vivid character studies bring the coin's history to life and illuminate the world of coin collecting, where the desire to possess often borders on madness. 8 pages of illustrations.

    Customer Reviews:

    5 out of 5 stars Wonderful story.......2007-07-26

    This book is truly terrific, thoroughly engaging. One can tell the author went to great lengths to find out every little detail because there are no real gaps in a story that spans over 7 decades. Just a delight to read.

    5 out of 5 stars a breathtaking read.......2006-09-09

    'Give us a coinage that has some beauty', ordered president Theodore Roosevelt at the beginning of the 20th century. Artist Augustus Saint-Gaudens provided the winning 'Double Eagle'-design. It was converted into a golden 20 dollar piece.

    445,500 Of these coins were inscripted with '1933'. As their production coincided with the abandon of the USA's gold standard, they were never issued. A few years later these 1933-coins were melted into golden bars. Nevertheless some estimated 10 copies turned up afterwards, being illegal by US government standards.

    Following their whereabouts, gradually narrowing her investigations to just one piece, Alison Frankel takes us on a breathtaking journey. It leads from the monetary politics of president Franklin Delano Roosevelt to the abundant wealth of Egyptian king Farouk; from dusty small towns in Texas to New York and London; from simple, low-paid mint-employees to top legal specialists; from honest, hard-working people via the US secret service to mafia-related criminals. In all providing a clear insight in the international coin-trade throughout the 20th century.

    The story finishes with an irresistable climax: on July 30, 2002, the 'Double Eagle' was auctioned off in New York for a net-price of $ 6,6 million. Thus becoming the most expensive antique coin in the world.

    Well-researched and well-written, Alison Frankel's book will leave you breathless.

    5 out of 5 stars Who knew?.......2006-06-13

    Wow, who would have imagined that the world of coin collecting would be inhabited by the quirky collection of characters in this intriguing book? I loved the mystery of the story and the surprising and true journey of the double eagle. The book is very well written in a style that is both hard to put down and fun to read. I enjoyed the history of early twentieth century coins. The legal maneuverings in the story are great!
    Read this book!

    5 out of 5 stars Gripping, factual and extraodinarily well written........2006-05-26

    This is by far the better of the few books about the chicanery, sneeky dealings and inevitabe "sting" surrounding the 1933 $20 Saint Gaudens. The author wastes no time jumping into the thick of things and every page is full of insight and great reading. There's no fluff in this book, it's cover to cover great "stuff"....the players, the government, the mint officials and the setup man, Izzy Switt are all followed in a way worthy of a murder mystery. What's also great is that inasmuch as this will appeal to the general public, it's really appealing to coin collectors because of the author's research into the inner dealings of the coin world. One coin...one incredible non-fiction novel!

    5 out of 5 stars This Real-Life Detective Story Is On the Money!.......2006-05-25

    I know nothing about coin collecting, but I bought this book on a whim -- the cover is striking -- and read the whole thing the first night. King Farouk, Teddy Roosevelt, obsessed Secret Service agents, shady coin dealers, clever lawyers... this book has it all, and I just couldn't stop reading until I finished the whole thing. Double Eagle is so much more than the saga of a gold coin. It's a compelling narrative, a fascinating work of history, an incisive study of collecting mania and, most of all, a thriller that ends with a twist that will shock you. I'd give it six stars if I could.
    History Of The United States Mint and Its Coinage (History of the U. S. Mint and Its Coinage)
    Average customer rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    • Provides interesting & braod information
    History Of The United States Mint and Its Coinage (History of the U. S. Mint and Its Coinage)
    David W. Lange
    Manufacturer: Whitman Publishing
    ProductGroup: Book
    Binding: Hardcover

    AmericanaAmericana | Antiques & Collectibles | Home & Garden | Subjects | Books
    Coins & MedalsCoins & Medals | Antiques & Collectibles | Home & Garden | Subjects | Books
    GeneralGeneral | Antiques & Collectibles | Home & Garden | Subjects | Books
    Similar Items:
    1. 100 Greatest U.S. Coins 100 Greatest U.S. Coins
    2. A Guide Book Of United States Type Coins: A Complete History And Price Guide For The Collector And Investor (The Official Red Book) A Guide Book Of United States Type Coins: A Complete History And Price Guide For The Collector And Investor (The Official Red Book)
    3. A Guide Book of Modern United States Proof Coin Sets: A Complete History and Price Guide (Official Red Book) A Guide Book of Modern United States Proof Coin Sets: A Complete History and Price Guide (Official Red Book)
    4. A Guide Book of United States Coins 2007 (60th Edition) A Guide Book of United States Coins 2007 (60th Edition)
    5. 100 Greatest American Currency Notes: The Stories Behind The Most Colonial, Confederate, Federal, Obsolete, and Private American Notes 100 Greatest American Currency Notes: The Stories Behind The Most Colonial, Confederate, Federal, Obsolete, and Private American Notes

    ASIN: 0794819729

    Customer Reviews:

    5 out of 5 stars Provides interesting & braod information.......2007-05-13

    The book takes you through a tour of US mint & coin history. The information is more broad than deep. It provides lots of interesting information in small chunks. Each writeup is 1-6 pages in length centered around a particular mint, person, coin, or event. I really enjoyed this book.
    A guide Book of Double Eagle Gold Coins: A Complete History and Price Guide
    Average customer rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    • A Must Have Guide Book for Anyone Interested in Double Eagle Gold Coins
    A guide Book of Double Eagle Gold Coins: A Complete History and Price Guide
    Q. David Bowers , and David W. Akers
    Manufacturer: Whitman Publishing
    ProductGroup: Book
    Binding: Paperback

    Coins & MedalsCoins & Medals | Antiques & Collectibles | Home & Garden | Subjects | Books
    GeneralGeneral | Antiques & Collectibles | Home & Garden | Subjects | Books
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    Precious MetalsPrecious Metals | Antiques & Collectibles | Home & Garden | Subjects | Books
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    Similar Items:
    1. A Guide Book Of United States Type Coins: A Complete History And Price Guide For The Collector And Investor (The Official Red Book) A Guide Book Of United States Type Coins: A Complete History And Price Guide For The Collector And Investor (The Official Red Book)
    2. The Expert's Guide to Collecting & Investing in Rare Coins: Secrets Of Success The Expert's Guide to Collecting & Investing in Rare Coins: Secrets Of Success
    3. A Guide Book Of Us Morgan Silver Dollars: A Complete History and Price Guide (Official Red Book) (Official Red Book) A Guide Book Of Us Morgan Silver Dollars: A Complete History and Price Guide (Official Red Book) (Official Red Book)
    4. Encyclopedia of U.S. Gold Coins: 1795 - 1933, Circulating, Proof, Commemorative, and Pattern Issues Encyclopedia of U.S. Gold Coins: 1795 - 1933, Circulating, Proof, Commemorative, and Pattern Issues
    5. A Guide Book of United States Coins 2007 (60th Edition) A Guide Book of United States Coins 2007 (60th Edition)

    ASIN: 079481784X

    Customer Reviews:

    5 out of 5 stars A Must Have Guide Book for Anyone Interested in Double Eagle Gold Coins.......2006-09-10

    Dave Bowers has shown us all once again his superb writing skills and in-depth Numismatic knowledge with this fairly new release on what just may be the worlds most popular gold coin, the US Double Eagle. All that is missing from this superb date by date analysis of the US double eagle gold coins guidebook is up to date pricing information, which of course has seen many changes ( most to the upside) since the release of this book.
    Whether you are investing in these coins or collecting them , this is one of the guidebooks you need to study this facinating and important series of US gold coins. As a professional coin dealer and specialist in double eagles, I recommend this book to anyone with an interest in these coins. Buy the book before you buy the coins!
    World War II Remembered: History in Your Hands, a Numismatic Study
    Average customer rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    • THE WWII Numismatic Reference
    • An incredible reference
    • Most extensive guide ever!
    World War II Remembered: History in Your Hands, a Numismatic Study
    C. Frederick Schwan , and Joseph E. Boling
    Manufacturer: B N R Press
    ProductGroup: Book
    Binding: Hardcover

    GeneralGeneral | United States | Americas | History | Subjects | Books
    PrintmakingPrintmaking | Crafts & Hobbies | Home & Garden | Subjects | Books
    jp-unknown2jp-unknown2 | Specialty Stores | Books
    ASIN: 0931960401

    Customer Reviews:

    5 out of 5 stars THE WWII Numismatic Reference.......2007-10-23

    This is the definitive WWII numismatic reference. It's 863 pages cover coins, currency and medals of all wartime issues by Allied, Axis, and non-belligerent countries. The scope is incredible when one considers the number of government entities involved. Currencies were issued, not only by countries, but literally all colonies who were cut off from the mother country. Armies issued their own military currency. Occupying powers issued currency to control the economies of occupied countries. This is more than a catalog, it is a history lesson, as the title implies. This is as the authors intended. The book includes short descriptions to introduce each country (as they were in 1940-45). It also addresses how countries financed their military forces, including bonds, lottery tickets, tax notices, etc. Currency control measures were complex almost beyond belief. For the numismatist (or economist) interested in the WWII era this book is an absolute must.

    5 out of 5 stars An incredible reference.......2006-12-11

    I use this book almost daily, and it is an incredible book - it does an incredible job covering money during world war two. It lists a large number of monetary issues and it is just incredible what they've accomplished here. Just incredible. Admittedly there's a few things such as the numbering system, etc. that are frustrating for me, but those things are relatively minor and I'm sure those things are going to be resolved in the next edition. Its worth every penny I paid for this book. I highly suggest this book to anyone with an interest and I suggest this for every library to own as well.

    5 out of 5 stars Most extensive guide ever!.......2000-04-03

    This is simply the most extensive work and study on all forms of paper money (also a little something for numismatists and scriptophilists) issued during the Second World War, thus the title of the book. It goes further than just being a "Catalogue" as it unveils the history behind the issues and disseminates data much like a detective novel, piecing together long forgotten information. Simply a must for all Military Notes enthusiasts and World War Two buffs and anyone interested in history and economic effects during the war.
    Counterfeit Currency of the Confederate States of America
    Average customer rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    • Long Overdue
    Counterfeit Currency of the Confederate States of America
    George B. Tremmel
    Manufacturer: McFarland & Company
    ProductGroup: Book
    Binding: Hardcover

    PrintmakingPrintmaking | Graphic Design | Design & Decorative Arts | Arts & Photography | Subjects | Books
    Economic HistoryEconomic History | Economics | Business & Investing | Subjects | Books
    Money & Monetary PolicyMoney & Monetary Policy | Economics | Business & Investing | Subjects | Books
    GeneralGeneral | 19th Century | United States | Americas | History | Subjects | Books
    GeneralGeneral | United States | Americas | History | Subjects | Books
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    GeneralGeneral | Crafts & Hobbies | Home & Garden | Subjects | Books
    PrintmakingPrintmaking | Crafts & Hobbies | Home & Garden | Subjects | Books
    All TitlesAll Titles | Qualifying Textbooks - Fall 2007 | Stores | Books
    Similar Items:
    1. Confederate States Paper Money Confederate States Paper Money
    2. Confederate Money Confederate Money
    3. Collecting Confederate Paper Money: A Complete and Fully Illustrated Guide to All Confederate Note Types and Varieties Collecting Confederate Paper Money: A Complete and Fully Illustrated Guide to All Confederate Note Types and Varieties

    ASIN: 0786414227

    Book Description

    Since shortly after the end of the Civil War, genuine Confederate paper money has been the subject of much research. While a number of publications are available today that describe and catalog the genuine currency, the availability of published information on its counterfeit counterpart is limited. What is available is somewhat incomplete, inaccurate and general in scope. This work is specifically concerned with the counterfeit currency that was produced and passed with genuine Confederate paper money during the Civil War years.

    The first part of the book is an historical narrative that discusses the events and people involved in the production and passing of counterfeit currency, and the countermeasures of the Confederate Treasury Department to protect its already weak medium of exchange from losing even more value.

    The second part of the book is an illustrated catalog that presents descriptions of all known examples of counterfeit Confederate currency. Over 180 illustrations are included and show most of the counterfeit notes. The appendix provides a brief, nontechnical explanation of the printing processes—relief printing, intaglio printing, and lithography—used in the mid-nineteenth century to manufacture counterfeit currency.

    Customer Reviews:

    5 out of 5 stars Long Overdue.......2004-07-25

    As a collector and student of Confederate currency, the availability of information on the contemporary counterfeit versions of the genuine currency was clearly lacking. This book provides a very helpful background and catalog. It fills in many of the blanks on the subject.

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