According to AI. What a Penny Could Buy in 1795 Short answer: A single U.S. cent in 1795 had the purchasing power of roughly 25–30¢ today, based on the fact that $1 in 1795 ≈ $25.81 today . That means a penny was meaningful—small, but not trivial. Below is what that amount could typically buy in everyday life. Everyday Purchases for 1¢ in 1795 Food & Provisions A penny could often buy: • A small loaf of bread (bread was commonly 1–2¢ depending on city and grain prices) • A mug of small beer (low‑alcohol table beer) • A piece of fruit (apple, peach, etc.) • A handful of nuts or candy from a street vendor Household & Daily Items • A sheet of writing paper • A few straight pins or needles • A small amount of lamp oil (not enough to fill a lamp, but enough for short use) Services • Ferry tolls in some towns (short crossings) • A newspaper’s single-page supplement (full newspapers were usually 4–6¢) Children’s Purchases • Marbles, jacks, or other tiny toys • Molasses candy or gingerbread bits Why a Penny Went Farther • The U.S. economy was still young and prices were low. • Wages were also low: a laborer might earn 50–75¢ per day, so a penny was 1–2% of a day’s wages. • Many goods were locally produced, keeping costs down.
Interesting comparisons, magic man. I had read somewhere that an unskilled worker earned about $3 a week and skilled help was paid about $5. Very much in line with what you've come up with. Bruce
I wonder if AI is capable of seeing the problem with saying 1c is worth 25-30c today, but could buy a loaf of bread or a beer.
Considering that there was so much less cost in local goods back then they would be much cheaper when compared to today's dollar. You only bought things that were produced locally, you weren't paying all of the extra costs of transportation. You didn't get fresh tomatoes in the middle of the winter, only what had been put up and stored locally. We have so much more cost built into our goods today that did not exist back then.