1883-1913 NICKEL FIVE CENTS BARBER 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. Chester Alan Arthur was
in the White House, and Franklin Delano Roosevelt was napping in a
nursery in Hyde Park, New York. FDR, after all, was only one year old
at the time. Horse-drawn carriages ruled the roads and in New York
City, they also reigned supreme on the just-completed Brooklyn Bridge.
The year was 1883, and one year after FDR's arrival in
that nursery, the United States Mint was busy giving birth to a "baby"
of its own: the Liberty Head five-cent piece.
The father of the new coin was A. Loudon Snowden,
Superintendent of the Philadelphia Mint. Snowden believed that the
nation's three minor coins, the cent, three-cent piece and five-cent
piece, should be uniform in design and metallic composition. In 1881 he
directed Chief Engraver Charles E. Barber to prepare suitable sketches
for these denominations, with all three to feature a classical head of
Liberty.
Barber completed the task late that year, and trial
strikes were made of the three coins. All were very simple in design,
with the Liberty head on the obverse and a Roman numeralI, III or Von
the reverse within a wreath, signifying values of one, three and five
cents, respectively. All were struck in copper-nickel, the same alloy
being used already in the three-cent piece and the Shield nickel.
It soon became apparent that Congress would oppose a
change in composition for the cent, which was made of bronze.
Furthermore, the Treasury would not permit a design change for the
three-cent piece. That left only the five-cent piece, and Snowden and
Barber concentrated on overhauling it.
The Shield nickel, introduced in 1866, was the first
base-metal five-cent piece in U.S. history; up to then, the half dime, a
small silver coin, had filled the nation's need for that denomination.
Though reasonably well accepted, the Shield nickel was hardly
untouchable; its stark, bland design made it a prime candidate for
remodeling. And its newness didn't protect it from replacement: At that
time, there wasn't yet a federal law establishing a minimum life
expectancy for U.S. coin designs.
Snowden admired Barber's new design, and he also
welcomed the change because it gave him a chance to increase the
diameter (and thus reduce the thickness) of the nickel. He believed that
this would lengthen die life dramatically. Snowden proudly unveiled the
Liberty Head nickel at a special ceremony on Jan. 30, 1883. Dignitaries
attended and souvenirs of the first strikes were distributed to the
guests. Regular coinage began later that weekthen suddenly, the
celebrating stopped.
The first "V nickels" had barely left the Mint
when appalled officials found a fundamental flaw in their design: Barber
had omitted the word CENTS. His oversight soon created a crisis for
Uncle Sam: Confidence artists were plating the nickels with gold and
passing them off to unsuspecting merchants as $5 gold pieces. They were,
after all, virtually the same size as half eagles. As brand new coins,
they were still unfamiliar to the public, and they lacked any statement
of value beyond the letter V, which, of course, could represent either
five cents or five dollars.
Barber quickly prepared a new design, this time placing
CENTS in big, bold letters below the V. By then, however, the Mint had
struck nearly 5 1/2 million of the so-called "Type 1" nickels,
and many had been gold-plated and passed. Even today, it isn't uncommon
to find these "racketeer nickels" in hoards and collections.
Their value as collector's items is small, but they hold great appeal as
historical curiosities. By the end of 1883, the Mint had produced more
than 16 million nickels with CENTS on the reverse, but the "no
CENTS" variety is far more common today in choice condition. Many
people set examples aside, mistakenly believing that having been
replaced, these would someday be rare.
Following all the drama surrounding its introduction,
the Liberty Head nickel settled down to a sedate existence and one more
befitting its role as a coin of the realm in the late Victorian era.
There were no further changes in its simple, straightforward design, and
for all but the final year, there were no branch-mint issues to
complicate matters, either; the Philadelphia Mint produced the entire
mintage except in 1912, when Denver and San Francisco struck the coin as
well in its last official appearance. (The mint mark appears to the
left of the word CENTS on the reverse).
There are low-mintage issuesnotably 1885, 1886 and
1912-Sbut there are no great rarities; 1912-S, at 238,000, is the only
coin with a mintage below a million. At the other extreme, not one V
nickel topped the 40-million mark; 1911 is the highest with just over
39.5 million.
In 1913, the Liberty Head design gave way to the Buffalo
type. No Liberty nickels were made that year officially, but years later
collectors were stunned to learn that five 1913 examples had surfaced,
all of them apparently made on the sly by someone at the Philadelphia
Mint. Despite their clouded origins, these came to be accepted as
legitimate collectibles, and they now rank among the most coveted and
valuable of all U.S. coins.
Although it covers 30 years, the Liberty nickel series
makes for a compact and completeable set, largely because of the
all-but-total lack of branch-mint issues. For that reason, it's widely
collected by date and mint, though many do collect it simply by type.
Proofs were made in every year, always in the thousands, a high level
for that period.
Because of their low relief, V nickels are generally
well struck and are readily available in very high grades. Points to
check for wear are the hair above Liberty's ear and the wreath and corn
ears on the reverse.
Controversy marked both the birth and the demise of the
Liberty Head nickel. There's no disputing one thing, though: This is a
coin with exceptional appeal for collectors.
SPECIFICATIONS:
Diameter: 21.2 millimeters Weight: 5 grams Composition:
.750 copper, .250 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.
Peters, Gloria and Mohon, Cynthia, The Complete Guide to
Shield and Liberty Head Nickels, DLRC Press, Virginia Beach, VA,
1995.
Taxay, Don, The U.S. Mint and Coinage, Arco Publishing
Co. Inc., New York, 1966.
Wescott, Michael, with Keck, Kendall, The United States
Nickel Five-Cent Piece, Bowers and Merena, Wolfeboro, NH, 1991.
Yeoman, R.S., A Guide Book of United States Coins, 47th
Edition, Western Publishing Co., Racine, WI, 1993.
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