Coins have been used in North America ever since European explorers first settled the continent. If the question is supposed to be about when the US started making its own coins, then the answer is 1793.
Coins are not "invented", they're designed. The first circulating cents were designed by the US Mint's Chief Coiner Henry Voight.
The best thing to do is click on images on you browser and type in US Coins, this will bring up pictures of US coins
The first coins made by the US Mint was in 1793.
inventions , coins and paper money
"E Pluribus Unun" and "In God We Trust" are some sayings that are used on US coins. US coins no longer have to say "In God We Trust" but so far they all do.
Coins are not "invented", they're designed. The first circulating cents were designed by the US Mint's Chief Coiner Henry Voight.
The earliest coins have been found in a tomb in China which dates to 900BCE, so they were invented before then.
The US Mint produces circulating coins, commemorative coins, and bullion coins for the United States.
No, most US coins are not magnetic.
No, Cayman coins do not work in the US.
The best thing to do is click on images on you browser and type in US Coins, this will bring up pictures of US coins
coins
The first coins made by the US Mint was in 1793.
All US coins use metal
No, retailers are allowed to accept whatever in payment for goods, be that US coins, Chinese Coins, gold and silver coins, or toothbrushes. A retailer can refuse to honor some or all US coins. However, since US coins are legal tender, a company cannot sue you for not paying a bill previously agreed upon in US dollars for paying in US coins. But at the point of purchase, a retailer can demand payment in whatever and can refuse US coins.
I think they invented coins for trade, and they also invented a political system.
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