Related Topics
The
Currency Act of 1764
British
Parliament - 1764
WHEREAS great
quantities of paper bills of credit have been created and issued in
his Majesty's colonies or plantations in America, by virtue of acts,
orders, resolutions, or votes of assembly, making and declaring such
bills of credit to be legal tender in payment of money: and whereas
such bills of credit have greatly depreciated in their value, by means
whereof debts have been discharged with a much less value than was
contracted for, to the great discouragement and prejudice of the trade
and commerce of his Majesty's subjects, by occasioning confusion in
dealings, and lessening credit in the said colonies or plantations:
for remedy whereof, may it please your most excellent Majesty, that it
may be enacted; and be it enacted by the King's most excellent
majesty, by and with the advice and consent of the lords spiritual and
temporal, and commons, in this present parliament assembled, and by
the authority of the same, That from and after the first day of
September, one thousand seven hundred and sixty four, no act, order,
resolution, or vote of assembly, in any of his Majesty's colonies or
plantations in America, shall be made, for creating or issuing any
paper bills, or bills of credit of any kind or denomination
whatsoever, declaring such paper bills, or bills of credit, to be
legal tender in payment of any bargains, contracts, debts, dues, or
demands whatsoever; and every clause or provision which shall
hereafter be inserted in any act, order, resolution, or vote of
assembly, contrary to this act, shall be null and void.
II. And whereas the great quantities of paper bills, or bills of
credit, which are now actually in circulation and currency in several
colonies or plantations in America, emitted in pursuance of acts of
assembly declaring such bills a legal tender, make it highly expedient
that the conditions and terms, upon which such bills have been
emitted, should not be varied or prolonged, so as to continue the
legal tender thereof beyond the terms respectively fixed by such acts
for calling in and discharging such bills; be it therefore enacted by
the authority aforesaid, That every act, order, resolution, or vote of
assembly, in any of the said colonies or plantations, which shall be
made to prolong the legal tender of any paper bills, or bills of
credit, which are now subsisting and current in any of the said
colonies or plantations in America, beyond the times fixed for the
calling in, sinking, and discharging of such paper bills, or bills of
credit, shall be null and void.
III. And be it further enacted by the authority aforesaid, That if any
governor or commander in chief for the time being, in all or any of
the said colonies or plantations, shall, from and after the said first
day of September, one thousand seven hundred and sixty four, give his
assent to any act or order of assembly contrary to the true intent and
meaning of this act, every such governor or commander in chief shall,
for every such offence, forfeit and pay the sum of one thousand
pounds, and shall be immediately dismissed from his government, and
for ever after rendered incapable of any public office or place of
trust.
IV. Provided always, That nothing in this act shall extend to alter or
repeal an act passed in the twenty fourth year of the reign of his
late majesty King George the Second, intituled, An act to regulate and
restrain paper bills of credit in his Majesty's colonies or
plantations of Rhode Island and Providence plantations, Connecticut,
the Massachuset's Bay, and New Hampshire, in America, and to prevent
the same being legal tenders in payments of money.
V. Provided also, That nothing herein contained shall extend, or be
construed to extend, to make any of the bills now subsisting in any of
the said colonies a legal tender.