Background Notes
Although some miners
worked independently in the early years, most miners worked for mining companies
that paid them for their work. Workers were usually paid in cash. However,
sometimes the Upper Peninsula's severe winter weather made it impossible to get
the money to the mine to pay the miners. Also, money was scarce during hard
times and depressions, including the Panic of 1893. When cash was hard to come
by, some mining companies issued their own paper money, called scrip.
The scrip could be used in
the company store to buy supplies miners needed for work, such boots or candles.
Miners and their families could also buy food and household items with the
scrip. Some towns had places where miners could exchange their scrip for U.S.
currency for a fee of up to 10% of the amount. The exchanged scrip would then be
sold back to the mining company.
Objectives
- Students will describe
scrip and its use to pay miners.
- Students will state differences between
scrip and legal tender (money).
- Students will describe the necessity of
making choices among purchases with a limited amount of funds.
Michigan Social Studies Curriculum Content Standards
This lesson presents an
opportunity to address, in part, these standards:
SOC.I.2. Comprehending the Past.
All students will understand narratives about major eras of American and world history by identifying the people involved, describing the setting, and sequencing the events.
SOC.IV.4
Economic Systems.
All students will explain how a free market economic system works, as well as other economic systems, to coordinate and facilitate the exchange, production, distribution, and consumption of goods and services.
SOC.IV.5. Trade.
All students will describe how trade generates economic development and interdependence and analyze the resulting challenges and benefits for individuals, producers, and government .
Materials Needed
Sample of mining scrip
(PDF), catalogs and magazines, paper and markers.
Directions
Show students the sample of
mining scrip. Discuss with class its use to pay miners when companies were short
of cash money. Compare it to a current $5 bill. Discuss how it differs from legal tender (e.g., appearance, not
issued by government, not valid at stores that did not have an agreement with
the mining company to reimburse it).
Have students select a
name for their own "mining company" and design scrip for it in
different denominations. Make copies of the scrip to use in the general store.
Plan a company
"general store." The store can be stocked with pictures from catalogs
and magazines. Each item should be priced. Use nineteenth century prices (see
the list below, the Derks and Emmet references, 19th century newspapers and
magazines or other resources).
Arrange students into
groups to represent mining families with a miner, wife and children. Pay each
"miner" his 1893 week's wages with scrip. For example, a miner making
$1.43 per day who worked a week of six days receives $8.58. Each
"family" should then make a week's shopping list for food and other
items. "Families" then go to the company store and do their
"shopping." Students report back with their list of purchases and how
they decided on the items for the week. Listed below are items with 1893-1895 prices:
|
Bacon,
l lb.
|
$ .14
|
|
Butter,
1 lb.
|
.28
|
|
Eggs,
1 doz.
|
.22
|
|
Flour,
5 lb.
|
.13
|
|
Milk,
1/2 gal. delivered
|
.14
|
|
Pork
chops, 1 lb.
|
.12
|
|
Potatoes, 10 lbs.
|
.17
|
|
Round
steak, 1 lb.
|
.12
|
|
Turkey, 1 lb.
|
.10
|
|
Miner's
shoes, l pair
|
2.00
|
|
Man's
hat (black stiff felt)
|
1.75
|
|
Man's
heavy knit wool socks, l pair
|
.14
|
|
Boy's
school outfit (suit, extra pants, hat)
|
5.00
|
|
Vegetable
seeds, one packet
|
.25
|
|
Cookie
cutter
|
.15
|
|
Baking
powder, 4 oz. can
|
.15
|
|
Haviland
tea pot (Carnot floral pattern)
|
1.95
|
|
Folding
ironing board
|
1.00
|
|
Lady's
watch
|
5.00
|
|
Fountain
pen
|
3.50
|
|
Ink,
15 oz. bottle
|
.17
|
|
Popular
American Dictionary
|
.30
|
|
Roget's
Thesaurus
|
1.40
|
|
Postage
stamp [collector's] album
|
1.05
|
|
Portrait
scrapbook (photo album) for 30 pictures
|
.10
|
|
Parcheesi
game
|
1.35
|
|
8-ball
croquet set, maple
|
2.20
|
|
Doll
with bisque head, long hair, and dress (15.5" tall)
|
.50
|
|
Brass
bird cage
|
1.00
|
|
Seth
Thomas mantle clock
|
5.75
|
|
Face
lotion
|
.50
|
|
Lady's
kid high button walking shoes, 1 pair
|
2.00
|
|
Ladies'
white muslin apron with pocket
|
.25
|
|
Girl's
calico dress (age, 10 yrs.)
|
.60
|
|
Ladies'
Home Journal magazine (one
issue)
|
.10
|
Questions for Discussion or
Research
- Why might the prices of
goods be higher in the Keweenaw area than in Detroit?
- Would it be possible
for other family members to earn money? How?
- What does the following
phrase mean: "I owe my soul to the company store."?
At the Michigan Historical Museum
- Look at photos and
displays in the "Workforce" area of the "Mining inMichigan" gallery to see clothing worn and
furniture used to get an idea of "extras" that mining families
could buy after purchase of food and necessities.
- Find the chart of 1893
wages and prices in the "Growth of Manufacturing" gallery. How do
miners' wages compare to wages of workers in the other industries listed
there? How many day's wages would the miner need to buy a blanket? a pair of
shoes? a bicycle?
Vocabulary
- Company store: A
store founded and operated by the mining company. It would accept the
miners' scrip in payment for purchases.
- Scrip: Paper
currency issued by mining and other companies instead of cash. It was generally spent in the company store.
- Wages: That
which is paid for work or services.
References
- Derks, Scott (Editor)
(1994). The Value of a Dollar: Prices and Incomes in the United States,
1860-1989. Detroit, MI: Gale Research Inc.
- Emmet, Boris (1969). Montgomery
Ward Catalog No. 57, Spring and Summer 1895 (reprint). NY: Dover
Publications.
- Stapler, Harry (1985). Pioneers
of Forest and City, A History of Michigan for Young People. Lansing, MI:
Michigan Department of State, Bureau of History (Chapter 10).
Michigan Historical Center, Department of History, Arts and Libraries
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