1856-58 CENT FLYING EAGLE 
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 the mid-1850s it was
apparent to Mint officials that the large copper cents struck since 1793
were too cumbersome and unpopular, as well as increasingly uneconomical
to make. The idea of fiduciary coinage, based on the trustworthiness of
the issuing authority, not on the coin's intrinsic value, was beginning
to catch on as well. Sooner or later the "big coppers" would
have gone the way of the dinosaur, but it was the large numbers of small
Spanish colonial silver coins in use throughout the United States, that
finally made it imperative that smaller cents had to be struck, and not
necessarily of pure copper.
It was Mint Director Snowden's desire to see all foreign coins
driven out of the channels of commerce in the United States. The
coinage law passed by Congress on February 21, 1857 gave him the means
to do so. In addition to abolishing the half cent, the law also
specified that the new cent would weigh 72 grains and be composed of
88% copper and 12% nickel. But the most important provision as far as
Snowden was concerned was the one that required the Mint and the
Treasury Department to convert Spanish double-reales, reales and medios
at the rate of 25, 12-1/2, and 6-1/4 cents, respectively. All other
government offices would only convert these three denominations at the
rate of 20, 10, and 5 cents. With such a powerful profit motive, banks
were very desirous of exchanging as many of the foreign silver coins as
possible for the new "nicks," as the Flying Eagle cents were
called. When the Flying Eagle cents were first released on May 25,
1857, more than a thousand people wound around the mint building to
convert their old Spanish coins. A secondary market developed
immediately, some people even paying a premium right on the grounds of
the mint building itself. Soon enough, though, the "nicks"
became commonplace, and by 1859 when the Indian cent design was
introduced, the Mint had struck a total of 42,050,000 cents with the
Flying Eagle design, more than enough for anyone who wished to have
multiple examples. Snowden was successful in driving out the
now-demonitized Spanish coins, and by 1859 it was estimated that some $2
million worth of the foreign silver pieces had been recoined into U.S.
subsidiary coinage.
Designed by James B. Longacre, the Flying Eagle motif was
actually an adaptation of the Christian Gobrecht/Titian Peale design
used on pattern dollars twenty years before. The reverse wreath was
similarly adapted from the model Longacre had made for the 1854 one and
three dollar gold pieces. As with other Longacre designs, the relief was
too high. This caused problems on fully struck coins, they would not
stack properly, and on less than perfectly produced pieces it created
problems associated with die opposition, that is, either the eagle's
head and tail did not strike up fully on the obverse or the wreath was
ill-defined on the reverse. On coins dated 1857, weak reverse definition
is especially prevalent.
Grading Flying Eagles can be somewhat tricky because of
the above-mentioned weakness of strike encountered on many examples.
The points of the design to show wear first are the eagle's breast and
wingtips on the obverse and the bow on the reverse. On mint state coins
that are weakly struck on the head or tail of the eagle or on the
reverse wreath, it is imperative that mint luster be present on all
areas of the design. Flying Eagle cents have been extensively
counterfeited. Fakes have been made by altering digits in the date,
false dies have been produced to strike phonies and spark erosion dies
have been used. When in doubt or when purchasing a high priced Flying
Eagle cent, it is always best to have the coin's authenticity expertly
verified.
Flying Eagle cents have proved enormously popular over
the decades, beginning with the pattern issue of 1856. It is unclear
exactly how many 1856 cents were struck, but the best estimates fall in
the range of 800 to as many as 1,500 pieces. Both proofs and business
strikes were made, as well as originals and restrikes. All are valuable
and have been extensively hoarded over the years, the most famous hoard
of which came from the estate of Colonel John A. Beck, who at one time
owned 531 pieces. The 1856 Flying Eagle cent is one of the few American
coins whose value is greater than its rarity. Worth more than $2,000 in
Good condition, the 1856 cent has a value and interest to collectors of
U.S. coinage that goes far beyond the more limited scope of "penny"
collectors. Why? The only reasonable answer seems to be: because they
always have been valuable. Even in the late 1850s, 1856 cents were
worth a dollar or two depending on condition.
Collectors of Flying Eagle cents have several ways to
collect these coins. A complete date and variety set is possible and
consists of only five issues: 1856, 1857, 1858 Small Letters, 1858
Large Letters and 1858/7. These are often collected in conjunction with
the Indian Head series. Type collectors generally stick to the 1857 or
one of the two 1858 issues. More advanced numismatists often assemble
sets of the pattern coinage of this design. Proofs are extremely rare,
except in the case of the 1856, and probably less than a total of 100
proofs exist of the three issues from 1857 and 1858.
It was Longacre's inability to engrave dies properly
that led to the early demise of the series. A new design was needed
where die opposition would not be a problem as it had been between the
eagle on the obverse and the wreath on the reverse. It was this need
that led Longacre to redesign the small cent for 1859, replacing the
flying eagle motif with an Indian head. The original small cent design,
however, gave collectors of 19th century U.S. coins a short, yet
challenging series that continues to intrigue numismatists more than a
century later.
SPECIFICATIONS:
Diameter: 19 millimeters. Weight: 4.67 grams Composition:
.880 copper, .120 nickel Edge: Plain
BIBLIOGRAPHY:
Breen, Walter, Walter Breen's Encyclopedia of U.S. and
Colonial Proof Coins 1722-1977, F.C.I. Press, Albertson, NY, 1977.
Breen, Walter, Walter Breen's Complete Encyclopedia of U.S.
and Colonial Coins, F.C.I. Press/Doubleday, New York, 1988.
Carothers, Neil, Fractional Money, A History of the Small
Coins and Fractional Paper Currency of the United States, John
Wiley & Sons, London, 1930.
Snow, Richard, Flying Eagle and Indian Cents, Eagle Eye
Press, 1992.
Steve, Larry R. &Flynn, Kevin J., Flying Eagle and
Indian Cent Die Varieties, Nuvista Press, Jarrettsville, MD, 1995.
Taxay, Don, The U.S. Mint and Coinage, Arco Publishing,
New York, 1966.
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