A forger who became the founder's engraver
In 1764, a young Connecticut silversmith was caught raising the value of colonial paper notes — taking a five-pound plate and re-engraving it into a higher denomination. The skill that made him good at his trade made him a dangerous forger. His name was Abel Buell, and he was barely past twenty.
The punishment was brutal and public. He was to be branded on the forehead with a letter marking his crime, have part of his ear cut off, and forfeit his property. The colony went through with it — but softened the blow because of his youth. The historian John Warner Barber, writing in 1836, recorded the strange, vivid detail that the people of Buell's town never forgot: "The tip only of Buell's ear was cropped off: it was held on his tongue to keep it warm till it was put on the ear again, where it grew on."
That should have been the end of him. Instead it was the beginning of one of the most improbable careers in early America. Buell talked his way back into society the only way he knew how — with his hands. He invented a machine for cutting and polishing gemstones, made a ring on it, and gave that ring to the very prosecutor who had convicted him. His sentence was eased. Within a decade the same colony that had marked him as a criminal would trust him to engrave its money.
Buell was, over one lifetime, a goldsmith, a jeweler, an engraver, a printer, a surveyor, an inventor, a cotton-mill owner, and a maker of coins. He was also restless, charming, and forever a step ahead of his debts. He is the reason the United States can point to a piece of metal and say: an American made this, here, first.