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No one can pinpoint the printing date of the first (sic) Howell Works scrip or, for that matter, when it was first used, however (sic). The earliest, signed Howell Works bill the author has (sic) seen is dated May 29, 1829 and numbered #18645. Bearing a denomination of $2, the bill is signed "James P., Allaire," but it is not his signature and the number is inconsistent with later denominations mentioning bill numbers. (See bill to the right.) The earliest bill the author has (sic) seen that is actually signed by Allaire is a $2 note dated May 1, 1832. In addition, there is a 12 1/2 cent note signed by the secretary of the company, Abraham Halsey, and made out to Alexander B. Allaire. (The latter two bills are part of the holdings of the Allaire Village, Inc. research Library in Allaire, New Jersey.)
Still another legal opinion was sought later in the year. Attorney Daniel B. Ryall stated in October that the "penalties of the...act will not and cannot attach to the company." However, he cautioned against the company's attempt to obtain a law authorizing the due bill issue. Since the law was not broken, why issue a disclaimer? About a year later, during the May 1833 term of the New Jersey Supreme Court, the Howell Works Company was the defendant in an action brought by Alexander P. Allaire, James' brother and manager of the works in New jersey. In the action, the plaintiff claimed that on May 1, 1832, he was issued an order on the company store for services rendered to the company and that the issuance of this "certain ticket" was contrary to the act, and therefore he was entitled to recover a sum of money as specified in the act. Ryall represented the defendant, who did not appear. The judge, after hearing the plaintiff, ruled for the defendant. It is probable the suit was brought merely to test the validity of the "currency." In any event, it was now legal for Allaire and his New Jersey company to issue the due bills.
Mrs. H. H. Miller, daughter of a skilled iron worker at Howell, grasped the concept: "The money was adopted to avoid bookkeeping, as at the end of the run, which was form nine to eleven months, the men were paid what was due them in legal money." (The "end of the run" refers to the length of time the furnace was "in blast" before having to be shut down for internal repairs after months of constant high heat.) The history of the tokens is not as clear-cut. No documents have been found to establish the reason for their issuance. Mrs. Miller refers to the Howell Works 1834 token as being used, "for the store trade," and the "rose" token for, "purchasing garden truck." The tokens, in general, were called "store and garden money." The store sold goods and produce to the people living near Howell, as well as to those who worked there. Allaire had purchased several farms, not only to supply the trees needed for the production of charcoal, but also to provide food for the workers. Allaire did not issue shinplasters, currency, or money, but rather "due bills." They were not issued to advertise the Howell Works or for self-aggrandizement or because of a shortage of specie, but merely to simplify the bookkeeping of the workmen's accounts. 9 Home | Events | Explore the Village | Meet the People | Trades and Crafts | Village Life
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