I couldn't find any exact names but I did find an article for you http://e-articles.info/e/a/title/What-was-the-Free-Silver-Movement/ start here this may help
William Jennings Bryan
William Jennings BryanWilliam Jennings Bryan
William Jennings Bryan.
President Garfield believed silver and gold should be used to ensure a sound monetary system.
The use of both gold and silver as a basis for a national monetary system
bimetallism
Money gets its value from the confidence that the public has in its acceptability. An example of such monetary system, is the United States monetary system. If you ever noticed the words in any dollar bill which says "In God We Trust" was first used in 1957. Before that date, dollar bills were showing "Silver Certificate". That means the dollar's value was equal to silver. But now the dollar is equal to how much you trust in the dollar and the monetary system. If the public lose the confidence, the dollar bill would worth nothing but a piece of paper. Basically, "In God We Trust" is a way to ask public in a nice way to never lose faith of the dollar, not God.
There is no nation-state there, so there are no mints to produce any kind of monetary system.
South Korea's monetary system is comprised on the Korean won. A single won is divided into 100 jeon, the monetary sub-unit of South Korea.
Spain did not "Borrow" it's monetary system. It adopted the Euro along with most other members of the EU.
I control it
The monetary system in the Philippines is quite diverse. It has changed over time and has even gone through periods of inflation.
A monetary system is a bank. Yes, it is simple as that, to be honest. While a financial institution is a bank that has many other aspects.