cent (n.)
late 14c., "one hundred," from Latin centum "hundred" (see hundred). The meaning shifted 17c. to "hundredth part" under influence of percent. It was chosen in this sense April 18, 1786, in a Board of Treasury report, as a name for a U.S. currency unit (the hundredth part of a dollar) by the Continental Congress. Dime also first appears as a U.S. coin name in the same document.
The word cent first had been suggested by Robert Morris in 1782 under his original plan for a U.S. currency. Morris's system had an unnamed basic unit at a very small value, and 100 of these was to equal a cent. But the ratio of this cent to the dollar would have been about 144:1.
The Money Unit will be equal to a quarter of a Grain of fine Silver in coined Money. Proceeding thence in a decimal Ratio one hundred would be the lowest Silver Coin and might be called a Cent. [Jan. 15, 1782, Morris's report, included in the Financier's response to a resolution of the Continental Congress on currency exchange]
Thomas Jefferson's counterproposal, which won approval, built on Morris's but eliminated the basic unit and made the decimal system uniform throughout.
Before the cent, Revolutionary and colonial dollars were reckoned in ninetieths, based on the exchange rate of Pennsylvania money and Spanish coin.
Trends of cent
updated on July 10, 2023
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