Lewis Feuchtwanger (born in
Fürth,
Bavaria on January 11, 1805) received a doctorate at the university of
Jena and then moved to
New York City. He was primarily a
mineralogist,
metallurgist, and
chemist, but also worked as a
physician and was a member of a number of learned societies. He wrote four books on mineralogy and chemicals. In 1837, to alleviate the need for small change during the Hard Times, Feuchtwanger created tokens made of
argentan (commonly known as "
German silver"), an alloy made of copper, nickel, zinc, tin, and trace metals. It was considerably cheaper to produce than the extraction of copper for the government-minted half-cents and cents. The
Panic of 1837, an especially rough period of economic
recession following the dissolution of the
Second Bank of the United States, was known for massive hoarding of small change. Much of the small change circulating at this time (roughly 1837–1844) was composed of clunky copper half-cents and privately-produced token "cents" or various cut- and whole silver coins of foreign origin. In fact, it would not be until 1864 that
Congress would enact into law that legal coinage be produced only by the
United States Mint. In 1837, Feuchtwanger presented his one cent coins to Congress for approval as legal coinage and a cheaper substitute for copper. This was probably the first attempt to circulate "nickel" coinage in the United States. Congress denied his request, but Feuchtwanger persisted in his production and circulation. Laws banning private coinage were not passed until 1864. Between 1837 and 1844 thousands of Feuchtwanger cents came out of his New York City
pharmacy. More than a dozen different die casts have been identified by collectors. Aside from one-cent tokens, in 1864 Feuchtwanger also produced three-cent tokens. These are considered extremely rare, as few specimens have survived. Feuchtwanger was also noted for producing stamp-like casts featuring his common theme of a pouncing eagle attacking a snake. ==See also==