The word nickel derives from the German word Kupfernickel,
which translates roughly as “Devil’s copper”. It got that name because
once in the Middle Ages, German miners found a large strike of what they
thought was pure copper, but turned out to be more of a copper-nickel mixture. This happens more frequently than you might
think. (Nickel deposits often seem more
like silver, at first.) Nickel wasn’t useless, and there was plenty of
copper in the mixture, which made refining the two metals very difficult. The extra work to make their strike
economically viable reduced the value of their find, so the miners
understandably cursed it, attributing the find to Nick, a mischievous sprite
from German mining mythology: Nickel.
It’s from this association that in English, the Devil came to be
sometimes known as Old Nick.
That old devil, Nickel (artist’s rendering—no photo
available).
Refining copper and nickel is a lot easier with modern
technology. Nickel is used in a lot of
alloys, and sometimes in its pure form.
In the United States, the silver half dime coin was discontinued in 1883
and replaced with a physically larger coin that was 75% copper and only 25%
nickel, also worth five cents. This new
coin, despite being mostly copper, was dubbed the nickel. The design of the
coin has changed a few times since 1883, but its metallic composition has remained
the same. The Canadian five-cent piece
came along later, and it was also called a nickel. This made more sense, since the Canadian
piece actually was 99% nickel. It
remained that way until 1981, when Canadian nickels adopted the same alloy of
the US coin. Canadian nickels today are
mostly nickel-plated steel, but no one feels the need to change the name.
Comments
Kupfernickel does not translate as 'Devil's Copper'. It’s the original German name for Nickel and it literally translates to ‘Copper Nickel’.