The story behind the coin
In 1792 there was no American penny. There was barely an American Mint. The nation paid for things with a chaos of foreign silver — Spanish dollars, British coppers, worn coins of a dozen countries — and Congress had just decided to fix it.
The Coinage Act, signed on April 2, 1792, created the United States Mint and a radically modern idea: a decimal currency, where one hundred cents made a dollar. Most of the world still counted in twelves and twenties. America would count in tens. But a law on paper is not a coin in a pocket. Somebody had to actually make one.
The Birch Cent is what that first attempt looked like. It is a pattern — a trial coin, struck to test a design and a recipe before mass production begins. The new Mint needed to know how a large copper cent would strike, how heavy it should be, what it should say. So in the second half of 1792, in the Mint's earliest, scrappiest days, a handful of these cents were made and handed around to be judged.
They were never spent. They were never meant to be. And that is exactly why they matter — they are the first cents of the United States, frozen at the moment the country was inventing its own money.