1864-73 TWO CENTS UNION SHIELD 
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. From a practical
standpoint, the two cent piece was one of the least successful coins in
U.S. history: The United States Mint produced it for only 10 years, and
each year the mintage declined, reflecting steadily falling public
interest in the coin. Yet, despite its failure as a medium of exchange,
the two-cent piece made a singular and enduring contribution to the
nation's coinage history, for this was the coin that introduced the
motto IN GOD WE TRUST. The motto and the coin itself were both direct
results of the Civil War.
By the end of 1862, with the war in its 21st month,
virtually all U.S. government coinage had vanished from circulation;
hoarders and speculators, joined by millions of just plain frightened
Americans, had set aside every coin they could get their hands on,
including not only gold and silver pieces but also base-metal issues.
Inventive entrepreneurs came up with a clever replacement: cent-sized
bronze tokens, generally bearing an implied or even explicit promise of
redemption in goods, services or money. These so-called "Civil War
tokens" soon gained broad acceptance as a useful money substitute.
The tokens' success came as a revelation to the Mint; up
to then, it had generally been assumed that Americans wouldn't tolerate
money (or money substitutes) with such small intrinsic value. The tokens
proved otherwise, and the Mint began preparing a modified one-cent
piece modeled after these wartime emergency pieces, a cent that would
retain the new and popular Indian Head design but on a slim, bronze
planchet instead of the thick, copper-nickel one then in use. At the
same time, Mint officials started giving serious thought to a two-cent
piece of similar composition, reasoning that this would alleviate the
coin shortage even faster.
On Dec. 8, 1863, Mint Director James Pollock wrote to
Treasury Secretary Salmon P. Chase recommending the issuance of a
two-cent piece in French bronze, the same alloy chosen for the slimmer
Indian cent. Pollock submitted two proposed designs, both by Chief
Engraver James B. Longacre, who also had designed the Indian cent. One
bore the head of George Washington; the other depicted a shield and
arrows. Pollock and Chase both favored the latter.
Up to then, U.S. coinage had carried no reference to a
supreme being. But that was about to change, thanks largely to the
strong religious fervor born of the Civil War. In 1861, a Baptist
minister, the Rev. Mark R. Watkinson of Ridleyville, Pennsylvania, had
written a letter to Secretary Chase urging that provision be made for
"the recognition of the Almighty God in some form on our coins."
Said Watkinson: "This would relieve us from the ignominy of
heathenism. This would place us openly under the Divine protection we
have personally claimed." Clearly, Chase had taken this appeal to
heart, for he specified the inclusion of some such inscription on the
two-cent piece.
Watkinson didn't come up with the words IN GOD WE TRUST.
On the first trial striking of the two-cent piece, the motto that
appeared was GOD OUR TRUST. Numismatic scholar Walter Breen theorized
that the final form was influenced by the motto of Chase's alma mater,
Brown University: IN DEO SPERAMUS, a Latin phrase meaning "In God
we hope." However it happened, IN GOD WE TRUST was the version
picked in the end.
Congress didn't stipulate the motto in the legislation
authorizing the two-cent piece, which won passage on April 22, 1864.
That law simply gave Treasury officials discretionary authority
concerning inscriptions on the nation's minor coins. On March 3, 1865,
this authority was extended to gold and silver coins and, for the first
time, IN GOD WE TRUST was specifically mentioned. Use of the motto
wasn't mandated, however, until 1908; and even then, the order applied
only to gold and silver coins. Not until 1955 did Congress enact
legislation requiring the inscription on all U.S. coins.
On the two-cent piece, IN GOD WE TRUST is displayed on a
ribbon above the shield and arrows on the obverse. The date appears
directly below the shield. The reverse bears a simple wreath surrounding
the statement of value2 CENTSand encircled, in turn, by UNITED STATES
OF AMERICA. On this design, wear first shows on the word WE, the arrow
points and the tips of the leaves.
Starved for coinage of any kind, Americans readily
embraced the two-cent piece when it made its first appearance in 1864.
That year also witnessed the high-water mark for the coin's production,
with nearly 20 million business-strike examples being made. Output was
relatively high in 1865, as well, topping 13.6 million. Acceptance and
mintage levels both fell off dramatically after the war, however, as
other coins began to reappear in circulation. Fewer than 3.2 million
pieces were struck in 1866 and, by 1870, production plunged below the
one million mark. Business strikes hit rock bottom in 1872, when the
Mint issued only 65,000 pieces for circulation. In 1873, the coin's
final year, there were only proofs.
Although it is unusually short and doesn't include a
single branch-mint issue, the series does contain some interesting
varieties. The best-known are the small-motto and large-motto issues of
1864. On some of that year's two-cent pieces, IN GOD WE TRUST has
noticeably smaller and fatter lettering. These small-motto pieces are
considerably scarcer than their large-motto counterparts and command
much higher premiums in every grade level. There also is a scarce and
valuable 1867 doubled-die error, and the proof-only 1873 issues come in
two varieties, with a closed 3 and an open 3 in the date. In all, the
Mint produced just over 45.6 million business-strikes and slightly more
than 7,000 proofs. The latter were made in each of the series' 10
years. Two-cent pieces are readily available in grades up to Mint
State-65 and Proof-65, but supplies dwindle sharply above that level.
Mint-state pieces command higher premiums when they are full red in
color. Because of its small size and absence of great rarities, this is
a set that even collectors of modest means have a realistic chance of
completing by date and mint (especially considering that only one mint,
Philadelphia, produced this coin). In practice, though, many settle for
collecting the series by type alone.
SPECIFICATIONS:
Diameter: 23 millimeters Weight: 6.22 grams Composition:
.950 copper, .050 tin and zinc Edge: Plain
BIBLIOGRAPHY:
Breen, Walter, Walter Breen's Complete Encyclopedia of U.S.
and Colonial Coins, F.C.I. Press/Doubleday, New York, 1988.
Flynn, Kevin, Getting Your Two Cents Worth, Published
by Kevin Flynn and Robert Paul, Rancocas, NJ, 1994.
Taxay, Don, The U.S. Mint and Coinage, Arco Publishing
Co., 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, 47th
Edition, Western Publishing Co., Racine, WI, 1993.
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