History of the U. S. Coin motto "In God
We Trust"
In a letter written November 13, 1861, by
Rev. Watkinson, Minister of the Gospel from Ridlevvile, to
the Secretary of the Treasury, Salmon P. Chase, it stated:
Dear Sir: You are
about to submit your annual report to the Congress
respecting the affairs of the national finances.
One fact touching our
currency has hitherto been seriously overlooked. I
mean the recognition of the Almighty God in some
form on our coins.
You are probably a
Christian. What if our Republic were not shattered
beyond reconstruction? Would not the antiquaries of
succeeding centuries rightly reason from our past
that we were a heathen nation? What I propose is
that instead of the goddess of liberty we shall have
next inside the 13 stars a ring inscribed with the
words PERPETUAL UNION; within the ring the allseeing
eye, crowned with a halo; beneath this eye the
American flag, bearing in its field stars equal to
the number of the States united; in the folds of the
bars the words GOD, LIBERTY, LAW.
This would make a
beautiful coin, to which no possible citizen could
object. This would relieve us from the ignominy of
heathenism. This would place us openly under the
Divine protection we have personally claimed. From
my hearth I have felt our national shame in
disowning God as not the least of our present
national disasters.
To you first I
address a subject that must be agitated.
On November 20,
1861, Secretary Chase wrote the following to James Polk,
Director of the Mint in Philadelphia:
Dear Sir: No nation
can be strong except in the strength of God, or safe
except in His defense. The trust of our people in
God should be declared on our national coins.
You will cause a
device to be prepared without unnecessary delay with
a motto expressing in the fewest and tersest words
possible this national recognition.
It was found that the Act of
Congress dated January 18, 1837, prescribed the mottoes and
devices that should be placed upon the coins of the United
States. This meant that the mint could make no changes
without the enactment of additional legislation by the
Congress. In December 1863, the Director of the Mint
submitted designs for new one-cent coin, two-cent
coin, and three-cent coin to Secretary Chase for
approval. He proposed that upon the designs either OUR
COUNTRY; OUR GOD or GOD, OUR TRUST should appear as a motto
on the coins. In a letter to the Mint Director on December
9, 1863, Secretary Chase stated:
I approve your
mottoes, only suggesting that on that with the
Washington obverse the motto should begin with the
word OUR, so as to read OUR GOD AND OUR COUNTRY. And
on that with the shield, it should be changed so as
to read: IN GOD WE TRUST.
The Congress passed the Act
of April 22, 1864. This legislation changed the composition
of the one-cent coin and authorized the minting of
the two-cent coin. The Mint Director was directed to
develop the designs for these coins for final approval of
the Secretary. IN GOD WE TRUST first appeared on the 1864
two-cent coin.
Another Act of Congress
passed on March 3, 1865. It allowed the Mint Director, with
the Secretary's approval, to place the motto on all gold and
silver coins that "shall admit the inscription thereon."
Under the Act, the motto was placed on the gold
double-eagle coin, the gold eagle coin, and the
gold half-eagle coin. It was also placed on the
silver dollar coin, the half-dollar coin and the
quarter-dollar coin, and on the nickel three-cent
coin beginning in 1866. Later, Congress passed the
Coinage Act of February 12, 1873. It also said that the
Secretary "may cause the motto IN GOD WE TRUST to be
inscribed on such coins as shall admit of such motto."
The use of IN GOD WE TRUST
has not been uninterrupted. The motto disappeared from the
five-cent coin in 1883, and did not reappear until
production of the Jefferson nickel began in 1938. Since
1938, all United States coins bear the inscription. Later,
the motto was found missing from the new design of the
double-eagle gold coin and the eagle gold coin
shortly after they appeared in 1907. In response to a
general demand, Congress ordered it restored, and the Act of
May 18, 1908, made it mandatory on all coins upon which it
had previously appeared. IN GOD WE TRUST was not mandatory
on the one-cent coin and five-cent coin. It
could be placed on them by the Secretary or the Mint
Director with the Secretary's approval.
The motto has been in
continuous use on the one-cent coin since 1909, and
on the ten-cent coin since 1916. It also has appeared
on all gold coins and silver dollar coins,
half-dollar coins, and quarter-dollar coins
struck since July 1, 1908.
References used:
U.S. Treasury - Fact Sheet on the History
of"In God We Trust"