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1777 HMS Phoenix: Paper Money as a Weapon of War

1777 HMS Phoenix: Paper Money as a Weapon of War

Epoch Times15-05-2025

Commentary
Ships of Britain's massive Royal Navy, the largest in the world, inflicted great damage on American ports, property, and vessels during the years of the Revolution (1775–1783). Perhaps none of those ships wreaked more havoc than HMS
Phoenix
, and it accomplished its devious work not with a cannon but with a printing press.
The bodies from the battle on Boston's Bunker Hill were buried just days earlier when the Second Continental Congress authorized the printing of paper money (see '
'Efforts in war or peacetime to undermine the economies, societies, and governments of adversaries by falsifying their money,' wrote John Cooley in his 2008 book 'Currency Wars,' 'have proliferated since ancient times.' In the 1770s, the British adopted the ruination of the enemy's money as a potent instrument of war.
HMS
Phoenix
was a frigate, a fifth-rate vessel and among the smallest in London's fleet. Built in 1759, she carried a mere 44 guns. As part of a flotilla, she bombarded New York City in mid-July 1776 before anchoring off Staten Island.
By January 1776,
Phoenix
had begun counterfeiting continental dollars (mostly 30-dollar bills) and smuggling them onshore to help accelerate the devaluing of the new paper money. Think of it as a miniature Federal Reserve on the sea.
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Benjamin Franklin later wrote that the British plan for the American paper currency was 'to deprive us of its use by depreciating it; and the most effectual means they could contrive was to counterfeit it. The artists they employed performed so well, that immense quantities of these counterfeits, which issued from the British government in New York, were circulated among the inhabitants of all the States, before the fraud was detected. This operated considerably in depreciating the whole mass, first, by the vast additional quantity, and next by the uncertainty in distinguishing the true from the false; and the depreciation was a loss to all and the ruin of many.'
In an article titled '
ceteris paribus
, the less any one unit of it will be worth. Newman explains:
'During the American Revolution the method devised by the British was a powerful three-pronged attack. It consisted of (1) the preparation and distribution of actual counterfeits of the American paper money; (2) the encouragement of 'Tories' and cheats to counterfeit and pass counterfeits independently; and (3) the issuance of propaganda as to the excellent quality and enormous quantity of counterfeits in circulation. The degree of effectiveness of these activities cannot be measured other than by recognizing that American paper money depreciated most when British counterfeiting activity was at its height.'
For a year and a half,
Phoenix
belched out huge quantities of paper money. American forces frequently captured individuals involved in distributing the British counterfeits, especially in the New York area. The British conducted similar inflationary activities from printing presses on land as well, and they counterfeited both continental dollars and local paper money issued by states. 'The speed with which prices rose and paper money became unacceptable,' Newman writes, 'was materially stimulated by British counterfeiting activity.'
Price inflation, thanks to the printing presses of both the British and the Americans, ran as high as 50 percent per month by the early 1780s.
HMS
Phoenix
departed New York in mid-1777, then sunk or captured a few French and American ships along the Atlantic seaboard before heading to the Caribbean. In October 1780, she sank in a hurricane that disabled the British fleet in the West Indies—although most of the men on board were rescued.
We'll never know for sure, but it seems quite plausible that the greatest harm the
Phoenix
inflicted on America was accomplished with paper, not gunpowder.
From the
Views expressed in this article are opinions of the author and do not necessarily reflect the views of The Epoch Times.

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