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The Almighty Dollar
In this ambitious and groundbreaking history of the dollar, financial journalist and economic scholar Brendan Greeley makes a new argument about the origins of our moneyāand the people and nations who have surrendered to it.
āBrimming with startling details, this is also serious financial history with a conclusion ripe for our unsettled times: Rulers and borders come and go, but the dollar has outlasted our illusions of sovereignty and control.āāEvan Osnos, author of The Haves and Have-Yachts
Americaās money is global moneyānearly every nation in the world writes international contracts in dollars, and in 2023, central banks around the world held nearly $6.7 trillion in dollar reserves, three times any other currency. Today, the United Statesā global hegemony rests largely on its ability to produce unlimited treasury bonds that are sold around the world, dollars that supported Americaās explosive growth in the twentieth century and funded its massive wars in the twenty-first. American power and the American dollar have become synonymous.
Yet in this brilliant 500-year history, Brendan Greeley argues that Americaās sovereignty over the dollar is an illusionāthat the dollar had already empowered and destroyed nations long before it washed up on colonial shores, and that no country or king has or can ever truly control it. Reaching back to the dollarās birth as the taler in the 15th-century silver mines of St. Joachimsthal, Greeley reveals how the dollar first thrived as a commodity for merchants and bankersāa big, silver coin that was trusted around the world, even as the miners who pulled it from the ground had trouble getting paid in that same silver. Greeley traces a captivatingly complex path across time and place, from the industrial collapse at the heart of Spainās 17th-century silver empire, to the birth of American paper dollars in colonial Maryland, 19th-century New Orleans bank failures, and the small town of Hawarden, Iowa, which created its own dollars during the Great Depression. At every surprising turn, Greeley upends assumptions about global currencies and draws out the centuries-old tension between how dollars are manufactured and whom they actually serve.
Singular in its breadth, The Almighty Dollar dismantles the myth that America created or has ever truly controlled the dollar. Through meticulous research and vividly rendered stories of merchants, monarchs, and everyday people both past and present, Greeley shows how the dollar became Americaās greatest export, spawning a vast financial industry that enriches the wealthy, even as the rest of the countryās industries suffer.
*Includes a downloadable PDF of images and illustrations from the book
Cover photographs: (top left coin) National Museum of American History/Smithsonian Institution, (top center coin) Eric P. Newman Numismatic Education Society, (first, second, and fourth dollar from the top) Eric P. Newman Numismatic Education Society, (third dollar from the top) National Museum of American History/Smithsonian Institution
āBrimming with startling details, this is also serious financial history with a conclusion ripe for our unsettled times: Rulers and borders come and go, but the dollar has outlasted our illusions of sovereignty and control.āāEvan Osnos, author of The Haves and Have-Yachts
Americaās money is global moneyānearly every nation in the world writes international contracts in dollars, and in 2023, central banks around the world held nearly $6.7 trillion in dollar reserves, three times any other currency. Today, the United Statesā global hegemony rests largely on its ability to produce unlimited treasury bonds that are sold around the world, dollars that supported Americaās explosive growth in the twentieth century and funded its massive wars in the twenty-first. American power and the American dollar have become synonymous.
Yet in this brilliant 500-year history, Brendan Greeley argues that Americaās sovereignty over the dollar is an illusionāthat the dollar had already empowered and destroyed nations long before it washed up on colonial shores, and that no country or king has or can ever truly control it. Reaching back to the dollarās birth as the taler in the 15th-century silver mines of St. Joachimsthal, Greeley reveals how the dollar first thrived as a commodity for merchants and bankersāa big, silver coin that was trusted around the world, even as the miners who pulled it from the ground had trouble getting paid in that same silver. Greeley traces a captivatingly complex path across time and place, from the industrial collapse at the heart of Spainās 17th-century silver empire, to the birth of American paper dollars in colonial Maryland, 19th-century New Orleans bank failures, and the small town of Hawarden, Iowa, which created its own dollars during the Great Depression. At every surprising turn, Greeley upends assumptions about global currencies and draws out the centuries-old tension between how dollars are manufactured and whom they actually serve.
Singular in its breadth, The Almighty Dollar dismantles the myth that America created or has ever truly controlled the dollar. Through meticulous research and vividly rendered stories of merchants, monarchs, and everyday people both past and present, Greeley shows how the dollar became Americaās greatest export, spawning a vast financial industry that enriches the wealthy, even as the rest of the countryās industries suffer.
*Includes a downloadable PDF of images and illustrations from the book
Cover photographs: (top left coin) National Museum of American History/Smithsonian Institution, (top center coin) Eric P. Newman Numismatic Education Society, (first, second, and fourth dollar from the top) Eric P. Newman Numismatic Education Society, (third dollar from the top) National Museum of American History/Smithsonian Institution
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The Almighty Dollar
The Almighty Dollar
In this ambitious and groundbreaking history of the dollar, financial journalist and economic scholar Brendan Greeley makes a new argument about the origins of our moneyāand the people and nations who have surrendered to it.
āBrimming with startling details, this is also serious financial history with a conclusion ripe for our unsettled times: Rulers and borders come and go, but the dollar has outlasted our illusions of sovereignty and control.āāEvan Osnos, author of The Haves and Have-Yachts
Americaās money is global moneyānearly every nation in the world writes international contracts in dollars, and in 2023, central banks around the world held nearly $6.7 trillion in dollar reserves, three times any other currency. Today, the United Statesā global hegemony rests largely on its ability to produce unlimited treasury bonds that are sold around the world, dollars that supported Americaās explosive growth in the twentieth century and funded its massive wars in the twenty-first. American power and the American dollar have become synonymous.
Yet in this brilliant 500-year history, Brendan Greeley argues that Americaās sovereignty over the dollar is an illusionāthat the dollar had already empowered and destroyed nations long before it washed up on colonial shores, and that no country or king has or can ever truly control it. Reaching back to the dollarās birth as the taler in the 15th-century silver mines of St. Joachimsthal, Greeley reveals how the dollar first thrived as a commodity for merchants and bankersāa big, silver coin that was trusted around the world, even as the miners who pulled it from the ground had trouble getting paid in that same silver. Greeley traces a captivatingly complex path across time and place, from the industrial collapse at the heart of Spainās 17th-century silver empire, to the birth of American paper dollars in colonial Maryland, 19th-century New Orleans bank failures, and the small town of Hawarden, Iowa, which created its own dollars during the Great Depression. At every surprising turn, Greeley upends assumptions about global currencies and draws out the centuries-old tension between how dollars are manufactured and whom they actually serve.
Singular in its breadth, The Almighty Dollar dismantles the myth that America created or has ever truly controlled the dollar. Through meticulous research and vividly rendered stories of merchants, monarchs, and everyday people both past and present, Greeley shows how the dollar became Americaās greatest export, spawning a vast financial industry that enriches the wealthy, even as the rest of the countryās industries suffer.
*Includes a downloadable PDF of images and illustrations from the book
Cover photographs: (top left coin) National Museum of American History/Smithsonian Institution, (top center coin) Eric P. Newman Numismatic Education Society, (first, second, and fourth dollar from the top) Eric P. Newman Numismatic Education Society, (third dollar from the top) National Museum of American History/Smithsonian Institution
āBrimming with startling details, this is also serious financial history with a conclusion ripe for our unsettled times: Rulers and borders come and go, but the dollar has outlasted our illusions of sovereignty and control.āāEvan Osnos, author of The Haves and Have-Yachts
Americaās money is global moneyānearly every nation in the world writes international contracts in dollars, and in 2023, central banks around the world held nearly $6.7 trillion in dollar reserves, three times any other currency. Today, the United Statesā global hegemony rests largely on its ability to produce unlimited treasury bonds that are sold around the world, dollars that supported Americaās explosive growth in the twentieth century and funded its massive wars in the twenty-first. American power and the American dollar have become synonymous.
Yet in this brilliant 500-year history, Brendan Greeley argues that Americaās sovereignty over the dollar is an illusionāthat the dollar had already empowered and destroyed nations long before it washed up on colonial shores, and that no country or king has or can ever truly control it. Reaching back to the dollarās birth as the taler in the 15th-century silver mines of St. Joachimsthal, Greeley reveals how the dollar first thrived as a commodity for merchants and bankersāa big, silver coin that was trusted around the world, even as the miners who pulled it from the ground had trouble getting paid in that same silver. Greeley traces a captivatingly complex path across time and place, from the industrial collapse at the heart of Spainās 17th-century silver empire, to the birth of American paper dollars in colonial Maryland, 19th-century New Orleans bank failures, and the small town of Hawarden, Iowa, which created its own dollars during the Great Depression. At every surprising turn, Greeley upends assumptions about global currencies and draws out the centuries-old tension between how dollars are manufactured and whom they actually serve.
Singular in its breadth, The Almighty Dollar dismantles the myth that America created or has ever truly controlled the dollar. Through meticulous research and vividly rendered stories of merchants, monarchs, and everyday people both past and present, Greeley shows how the dollar became Americaās greatest export, spawning a vast financial industry that enriches the wealthy, even as the rest of the countryās industries suffer.
*Includes a downloadable PDF of images and illustrations from the book
Cover photographs: (top left coin) National Museum of American History/Smithsonian Institution, (top center coin) Eric P. Newman Numismatic Education Society, (first, second, and fourth dollar from the top) Eric P. Newman Numismatic Education Society, (third dollar from the top) National Museum of American History/Smithsonian Institution
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Description
In this ambitious and groundbreaking history of the dollar, financial journalist and economic scholar Brendan Greeley makes a new argument about the origins of our moneyāand the people and nations who have surrendered to it.
āBrimming with startling details, this is also serious financial history with a conclusion ripe for our unsettled times: Rulers and borders come and go, but the dollar has outlasted our illusions of sovereignty and control.āāEvan Osnos, author of The Haves and Have-Yachts
Americaās money is global moneyānearly every nation in the world writes international contracts in dollars, and in 2023, central banks around the world held nearly $6.7 trillion in dollar reserves, three times any other currency. Today, the United Statesā global hegemony rests largely on its ability to produce unlimited treasury bonds that are sold around the world, dollars that supported Americaās explosive growth in the twentieth century and funded its massive wars in the twenty-first. American power and the American dollar have become synonymous.
Yet in this brilliant 500-year history, Brendan Greeley argues that Americaās sovereignty over the dollar is an illusionāthat the dollar had already empowered and destroyed nations long before it washed up on colonial shores, and that no country or king has or can ever truly control it. Reaching back to the dollarās birth as the taler in the 15th-century silver mines of St. Joachimsthal, Greeley reveals how the dollar first thrived as a commodity for merchants and bankersāa big, silver coin that was trusted around the world, even as the miners who pulled it from the ground had trouble getting paid in that same silver. Greeley traces a captivatingly complex path across time and place, from the industrial collapse at the heart of Spainās 17th-century silver empire, to the birth of American paper dollars in colonial Maryland, 19th-century New Orleans bank failures, and the small town of Hawarden, Iowa, which created its own dollars during the Great Depression. At every surprising turn, Greeley upends assumptions about global currencies and draws out the centuries-old tension between how dollars are manufactured and whom they actually serve.
Singular in its breadth, The Almighty Dollar dismantles the myth that America created or has ever truly controlled the dollar. Through meticulous research and vividly rendered stories of merchants, monarchs, and everyday people both past and present, Greeley shows how the dollar became Americaās greatest export, spawning a vast financial industry that enriches the wealthy, even as the rest of the countryās industries suffer.
*Includes a downloadable PDF of images and illustrations from the book
Cover photographs: (top left coin) National Museum of American History/Smithsonian Institution, (top center coin) Eric P. Newman Numismatic Education Society, (first, second, and fourth dollar from the top) Eric P. Newman Numismatic Education Society, (third dollar from the top) National Museum of American History/Smithsonian Institution
āBrimming with startling details, this is also serious financial history with a conclusion ripe for our unsettled times: Rulers and borders come and go, but the dollar has outlasted our illusions of sovereignty and control.āāEvan Osnos, author of The Haves and Have-Yachts
Americaās money is global moneyānearly every nation in the world writes international contracts in dollars, and in 2023, central banks around the world held nearly $6.7 trillion in dollar reserves, three times any other currency. Today, the United Statesā global hegemony rests largely on its ability to produce unlimited treasury bonds that are sold around the world, dollars that supported Americaās explosive growth in the twentieth century and funded its massive wars in the twenty-first. American power and the American dollar have become synonymous.
Yet in this brilliant 500-year history, Brendan Greeley argues that Americaās sovereignty over the dollar is an illusionāthat the dollar had already empowered and destroyed nations long before it washed up on colonial shores, and that no country or king has or can ever truly control it. Reaching back to the dollarās birth as the taler in the 15th-century silver mines of St. Joachimsthal, Greeley reveals how the dollar first thrived as a commodity for merchants and bankersāa big, silver coin that was trusted around the world, even as the miners who pulled it from the ground had trouble getting paid in that same silver. Greeley traces a captivatingly complex path across time and place, from the industrial collapse at the heart of Spainās 17th-century silver empire, to the birth of American paper dollars in colonial Maryland, 19th-century New Orleans bank failures, and the small town of Hawarden, Iowa, which created its own dollars during the Great Depression. At every surprising turn, Greeley upends assumptions about global currencies and draws out the centuries-old tension between how dollars are manufactured and whom they actually serve.
Singular in its breadth, The Almighty Dollar dismantles the myth that America created or has ever truly controlled the dollar. Through meticulous research and vividly rendered stories of merchants, monarchs, and everyday people both past and present, Greeley shows how the dollar became Americaās greatest export, spawning a vast financial industry that enriches the wealthy, even as the rest of the countryās industries suffer.
*Includes a downloadable PDF of images and illustrations from the book
Cover photographs: (top left coin) National Museum of American History/Smithsonian Institution, (top center coin) Eric P. Newman Numismatic Education Society, (first, second, and fourth dollar from the top) Eric P. Newman Numismatic Education Society, (third dollar from the top) National Museum of American History/Smithsonian Institution












