1859-64 CENT INDIAN HEAD LIBERTY 
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. There was nothing
penny-ante about the one cent piece in the mid-19th century: Its buying
power was substantial. The famed King Ranch in Texas, for example, came
into being in 1853 when steamboat captain Richard King bought 15,500
acres for just $300, less than two cents per acre. For working-class
Americans, 10 cents an hour was a living wage, so people understandably
watched their "pennies" closely.
By the 1850s, many Americans actually were clamoring to
have the cent's clout diminished. What bothered them, however, wasn't
its buying power but its size: The copper cent then being minted was
almost as large and heavy as today's half dollar, and many had come to
consider it simply too big for their britches.
The United States Mint responded to this concern in 1857
when it discontinued the large cent and half cent and introduced the
nation's first small-size cent, the Flying Eagle design. But it soon
became obvious that the new cent, featuring a portrait of an eagle in
flight, was a less-than-perfect solution: Because of deficiencies in its
design, it often emerged weakly struck, especially at the eagle's tail
and wingtip.
The Flying Eagle cent had barely begun to circulate when Mint
Director James Ross Snowden instructed Chief Engraver James B. Longacre
to start preparing new designs, one of which would be chosen to replace
it. Longacre must have felt mixed emotions at this assignment, for
while he undoubtedly welcomed the chance to fashion the new design, the
Flying Eagle portrait about to bite the dust was also his.
Ambivalent though he might have been, the chief engraver
threw himself into the task with remarkable zeal, creating more than a
dozen pattern cents. Many of these were refinements of the Flying Eagle
coin, with modifications meant to make it easier to strike. On some,
for example, the eagle's tail and wingtip were shortened and moved away
from the obverse's rim; that way, they didn't appear directly opposite
the wreath on the reversethe clash that had caused the weak-strike
problem in the first place.
Given the volume and variety of these patterns, 1858 may
well have witnessed the striking of more different U.S. cents than any
other year. And many, if not all, reached the public, or at least the
collecting public since the Mint put them up for sale in sets of 12
different kinds.
At one point, Director Snowden suggested that Longacre
fashion a head of Christopher Columbus for the cent. The chief engraver
replied that while the idea was "entitled to consideration,"
it seemed likely to stir opposition, for "how can it be relieved of
any of the objections that have theretofore prevailed against the
introduction of the head of [George] Washington upon the coinage of the
United States?"
In the end, Longacre came up with an alternative that Snowden
liked even better: a portrait of an Indian girl or more likely a
Caucasian wearing a feathered headdress. The Mint director chose this
design to replace the flying eagle with the start of production in
January 1859, paired with a simple laurel wreath on the reverse not only
for aesthetic reasons, it would seem, but also because the combination
had the lowest relief of all the ones proposed. Simplicity is the
hallmark of the coin: Aside from the Indian portrait, the obverse bears
only the date and the inscription UNITED STATES OF AMERICA, while
there's nothing on the reverse except the wreath and the words ONE CENT
within it.
An oft-repeated story has it that Longacre modeled the
"Indian" after his young daughter, Sarah. Evidence suggests
that this is pure fantasy: Researchers have found drawings of virtually
the same female head in Longacre sketchbooks from 10 years earlier,
always with the same adult proportions and the same long "Greek"
nose. And the artist himself referred to this profile in letters and
official memoranda as being that of the Venus Accroupie, or "Crouching
Venus"a Greco-Roman statue displayed at that time in a
Philadelphia museum.
Whatever the source of his inspiration, it's clear that his idea
was indeed inspired, for the Indian Head cent won immediate and
enduring acclaim from the American public. In his book Numismatic
Art in America, Cornelius Vermeule hails it as "perhaps the
most beloved and typically American of any piece great or small in the
American series."
"Great art the coin was not," Vermeule
declares, "but it was one of the first products of the United
States Mint to achieve the common touch and to identify itself with the
transitions from frontier to industrial to social expansion during its
decades of circulation ..."
The Mint could not have chosen a more momentous time to
introduce the coin: It entered the nation's commerce on the eve of the
Civil War. Perhaps in anticipation of the coming crisis, in 1860 Mint
Director Snowden sought and obtained permission to add a national
symbola small federal shieldat the top of the coin's reverse. That same
year, the laurel wreath gave way to a thicker oak wreath.
Copper-nickel Indian Head cents were minted annually from 1859
through 1864, with a total of about 158 million being madeall in
Philadelphia. Proofs were struck each year as well. The series contains
no great rarities, and the only major variety is an 1860 cent on which
the Indian's bust is pointed, rather than rounded. Mint-state examples
are relatively abundant in grades up to MS-65. When grading this
design, the first places to show wear on the obverse will be the hair
above the ear and the curl to the right of the ribbon; on the reverse,
check the bow knot. Because the series is so short and has no real
"stoppers," many collect it by date. Many others prefer to
collect it by type, acquiring one example of the 1859 and one to
represent the years from 1860 through 1864, when the reverse was
different.
Like its Flying Eagle predecessor, the Indian Head cent
started out as a copper-nickel coin, made from an alloy whose light
color led to its being called a "white" cent. War-related
hoarding caused the Mint to switch to a cheaper bronze alloy in 1864
and also to reduce the weight by a third, resulting in a thinner coin
much like the cent we know today. But the Indian Head portrait remained
in use for half a century before giving way to the Lincoln cent in 1909.
SPECIFICATIONS:
Diameter: 19 millimeters Weight: 4.67 grams Composition:
.880 copper, .120 nickel Edge: Plain
BIBLIOGRAPHY:
Breen, Walter, Walter Breen's Complete Encyclopedia of U.S.
and Colonial Coins, F.C.I. Press/Doubleday, New York, 1988.
Snow, Richard, Flying Eagle & 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
Co. Inc., New York, 1966.
Vermeule, Cornelius, Numismatic Art in America, The
Belknap Press of Harvard University Press, Cambridge, MA, 1971.
Yeoman, R.S., A Guide Book of United States Coins, 48th
Edition, Western Publishing Co., Racine, WI, 1994.
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