Every ridged edge on a coin is a scar from an old economic battlefield. When money was made of real silver and gold, criminals quietly shaved slivers from the edges, weakening each coin while secretly growing piles of stolen metal. Trust in money began to crumble. Merchants doubted every payment. Governments watched their reserves disappear, one tiny scrape at a time.
The solution was as simple as it was brilliant: carve an unmistakable pattern into every edge. Any clipping would instantly show. Under Isaac Newton’s watch at the Royal Mint, reeded edges helped rescue public confidence and slow a hidden crisis. Today, coins are mostly base metal, yet the ridges remain—still used by machines, still helping the visually impaired, still reminding us that even the smallest detail in your pocket exists because someone, centuries ago, tried to cheat the system.
