1839-57 CENT CORONET HEAD LIBERTY BRAIDED 
Image courtesy of Heritage Numismatic Auctions
This historical information is provided
complements of NGC (Numismatic Guarantee Corporation). NGC is the
"grading service of choice" of the ANA (American Numismatic
Association), the largest collector oriented organization in the United
States. NGC is one of the two largest independent grading services.
NGC has been grading coins since 1987, and have graded in excess of two
and one half million coins. By 1839, few people
inside or outside the U.S. Mint were satisfied with the large cent
design, least of all its creator, Chief Engraver Christian Gobrecht.
But this was nothing new; from its very beginnings, the large cent had
suffered abuse and ridicule. First of all, there were the designs.
Though loved by present-day collectors, initial reaction wasn't quite so
kind. Contemporary and modern names describing Miss Liberty vividly
illustrate the public's disdain. From the "Liberty in a fright"
of the Chain cents through the Classic Head's "fat mistress"
to the "obese ward boss" of the Matron Head, criticism never
ceased. Now Gobrecht was faced with the same for his "Silly"
and "Booby" head cents of 1839. It was clearly time for a
change.
Art historians and numismatists believe that Gobrecht's
inspiration for the new 1839 design was the classic figure of Love in
Benjamin West's painting, Omnia Vincit Amor (Love Conquers All),
created early in the 19th century. The braided hair over Liberty's
brow, her coronet and the long, loose locks flowing down her neck
reflect the famed Empire style, then a decade out of date in Europe but
firmly fixed in American hair and clothing fashions of the day.
Issues of 1839 through early 1843, now generally called
the Petite Head, show Liberty leaning foward, and feature a
younger-looking version than Gobrecht's later rendition, on which the
head is upright and poised more gracefully in the field. Liberty is
surrounded by the obligatory 13 stars, with the date below. The reverse
continued to use a closed-circle laurel wreath, made up of a single
stem with leaves in groups of four, interspersed with large round
berries. The wreath encircled ONE CENT (without the raised line below
that appeared on earlier designs) and in turn was surrounded by the
legend UNITED STATES OF AMERICA. Gobrecht's 1843 revision featured bold
serif-style letters substantially larger than on earlier reverses.
Grading of this design is fairly straightforward, with measurable wear
first appearing on the hair above the ear and on the bow on the wreath.
Braided Hair coins achieved greater uniformity than any
of the earlier large cents. Introduction of steam power, advances in
hubbing the design into the dies and the use of logotypes or single
four-digit punches to impress dates eliminated the many varieties so
beloved by copper collectors. Minor varieties do exist, however, and
these were first listed by Frank C. Andrews in 1883.
The definitive work on these late dates was completed by
Howard R. Newcomb in 1938 and published by Stack's of New York in 1944
as United States Copper Cents 1816-1857. Newcomb devoted years
to identifying and describing thousands of minor varieties. "N"
numbers remain standard today, though attribution became easier with the
J.R. Grellman-Jules Reiver Attribution Guide for United States
Large Cents, 1840-1857, published in 1986.
Naked-eye or "Red Book varieties" of general
interest include large and small dates of 1840 and 1842, and multiple
obverse/reverse combinations for 1843. Others are 1844 and 1851 coins
showing an 18 punched upside down where the last two digits of the date
were supposed to go, creating the 1844/81 and 1851/81 varieties. Large
cents of 1846 appear with small, medium and large dates, while 1847
coins include the bold Large over Small 7 variety. The 1855 issues show
slanting (italic) or upright 5s. These two types of 5s also occur on
cents of 1856. Chief Engraver James B. Longacre favored the slanting 5,
while the upright 5 is attributed to an unknown assistant. The bold
1855 "Knob on Ear" variety resulted from a large die chip that
gradually expanded to cover part of Liberty's head. The remarkable
increase in production with the arrival of steam power is well
illustrated by mintages of this design. Except for 1857, between 1.5 and
9 million pieces were made each year, all at the Philadelphia Mint.
Proofs are known of all dates except 1839, 1851 and 1853, and all are
rare to extremely rare. As always, mint-red coins enjoy consistent
demand, particularly from type collectors. Most of the dates in the 50s,
except for 1854 and 1857, are occasionally available in mint red:
Hoards of each were uncovered over the yearsmany in bank vaults during
1933's Bank Holiday.
Although initially welcomed by a public in need of small
change for commerce, the cumbersome coins soon were widely disliked,
even before the Braided Hair design debuted. They were heavy, often
found badly worn or corroded and didn't have legal-tender status.
Merchants could and did refuse to accept them, often preferring their
own store tokens or the "Hard Times" tokens commonly used in
trade.
Rejected in commerce, the unwanted cents didn't go to
waste. Craftsmen needing copper for their work often found it
advantageous to purchase cents in bulk, sometimes by the keg
(approximately 14,000 pieces!), and melt them down. With the rising
price of copper in the early 1850s, they paid less for the coins than
the Mint paid for the raw copper. Other innovative uses abounded.
Physicians recommended wearing them for arthritis (not unlike the copper
bracelets of today), housewives used them in pickling brine and after
drilling, forming or shaving they served as everything from gears to
screwdrivers to valve-cocks to advertising tokens. They even entered
the slave trade. Ironically, while some large cents were shipped
overseas to pay tribal chieftains for slaves, uniquely notched pieces
would later serve as identification for runaway slaves on their way
north. As early as 1850, the Mint gave serious thought to replacing the
large cents with a smaller coin. In 1857, officials selected an alloy
of 12% nickel and 88% copper for the new 19-millimeter Flying Eagle
cents. Few mourned the end of the large cents at the time, but the
sudden change galvanized America's first numismatists and focused their
attention on the familiar copper coins. After 1857, Philadelphia became
the birthplace of coin collecting in America. English-born Edward Cogan
added large cents to his line of books and art work, and others soon
followed his lead. Within a decade, dealer Ebenezer Mason would begin
publishing his
Monthly Coin and Stamp Collectors Magazine, and the
American Journal of Numismatics would debut, both further
publicizing the virgin field of numismatics.
A decade after its demise, the Braided Hair large cent
made one last shadowy reappearance. Mint Director Henry Linderman
ordered "fantasy pieces" madedated 1868using the old dies in
storage. Struck both in copper and nickel, fewer than a dozen pieces
are known today. Between collectors and the creativity of the
Philadelphia Mint, the large cent was more popular after its death than
during its many years of circulation!
SPECIFICATIONS:
Diameter: 27.5 millimeters Weight: 10.89 grams Composition:
Copper Edge: Plain
BIBLIOGRAPHY:
Alexander, David T., DeLorey, Thomas K. and Reed, P. Bradley,
Coin World Comprehensive Catalog and Encyclopedia of United States
Coins, World Almanac-Pharos Books, New York, 1990.
Breen, Walter, Walter Breen's Complete Encyclopedia of U.S.
and Colonial Coins, F.C.I. Press/Doubleday, New York, 1988.
Grellman, J.R. and Reiver, Jules, Attribution Guide for
United States Large Cents 1840-1857, Published by the authors,
Montgomery, AL, 1987.
Newcomb, Howard R., United States Copper Cents, 1816-1857,
Quarterman Publications, Lawrence, MA, 1981.
Schwarz, Ted, Coins As Living History, Arco Publishing
Co., New York, 1976.
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