1792 HALF DISME BIRCH LIBERTY HEAD
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. Born of the idea that
man's destiny was largely the result of his own effort and imagination,
the United States of 1792 had grown to fourteen states with the
addition, in 1791, of Vermont. The army, of about 5,000 men, was
fighting Indians in the Northwest Territory. The nation had no navy and
paid an annual tribute to the Barbary Pirates. The migration West had
begun.
Due to the long standing trade relationships with the
Spanish possessions of Florida and Louisiana, Spanish silver were the
most common silver coins in circulation, followed by the English
shillings and pence of the mother country. Because of the
incompatibility of the Spanish and English monetary systems, the conduct
of business, trade and everyday life was burdened with the need for
intricate conversion tables. Accounts were, of necessity, kept both in
English pounds and Spanish reales. Confusion was immense. Action was
called for.
The need for a rational system for United States coinage
received the early attention of Congress. Benjamin Franklin, Thomas
Jefferson and Alexander Hamilton all strongly favored adoption of the
decimal system. They argued that the decimal system represented a clean
break with the past and was the most scientific way to reconcile the
differences of the Spanish and English monetary systems. The decimal
system was invented by Simon Stevin van Brugghe (1548-1620) and first
published in a pamphlet,
Be Thiende, in 1585. The French translation was entitled La
Disme. Robert Norton's 1608 translation:
Disme: The art of tenths, or, Decimall arithmeticke introduced
the idea to England. It was from these European roots that the concept
of tenths, or
"La Disme"anglicized later to "dime"immigrated to
America.
A Congressional resolution on July 6, 1785, adopted the
dollar as the monetary unit of the United States. Subsequent
resolutions spanning 1786 and 1787 specified weight, fineness and the
decimal system for the relationship of each of the coins authorized.
Adoption of the Constitution on September 17, 1787, reserved the right
to coin money and regulate the value thereof to the Congress. This set
the stage for passage of the Mint Act of April 2, 1792. This Act
specified "...that the money of account of the United States shall
be expressed in dollars or units, dismes or tenths, cents or hundredths
and that all accounts in the public offices and all proceedings in the
courts of the United States shall be kept and had in conformity to this
regulation."
Events moved swiftly from that point. On April 14, 1792,
Washington appointed David Rittenhouse of Philadelphia, the most
renowned scientist in America, Director of the Mint. Henry Voight, a
well known clock maker, was appointed Acting Chief Coiner on June 1.
Mechanics began construction of the necessary coining apparatus and
"engines." On July 9, 1792, President Washington authorized
proceeding with the coining of half dismes. No time was wasted, as just
four days later, on July 13, 1792, Thomas Jefferson, then Secretary of
State, recorded in his household account book: "rec'd from the mint
1500 half dimes of the new coinage."
New research suggests that the single pair of dies used
for these coins was designed and engraved by a British medalist,
William Russell Birch, rather than the Robert Birch who was associated
with the Mint in those early years and previously credited with the
coin's design. Birch purportedly used letter punches supplied by Jacob
Bay, a Germantown, Pennsylvania maker of printing types. The obverse of
the half disme portrays the head of Liberty facing left, with the date
1792 below. The motto LIB.PAR. OF SCIENCE & INDUSTRY encircles the
border. The reverse depicts an eagle flying left with the denomination
HALF DISME in two lines, with a five pointed star in the exergue below.
The legend UNI. STATES OF AMERICA frames the eagle. As the mint
building was then under construction, the coining machinery was in the
cellar of John Harper, a saw maker, at the corner of Cherry and 5th
Streets, at which place these pieces were struck.
On April 9, 1844, Dr. Jonas McClintock, a Treasury
official, had a conversation at the Mint with Adam Eckfeldt, the retired
Chief Coiner and only surviving Mint official who was actually present
when the half dismes were made. Eckfeldt related that President
Washington deposited $100 in bullion or specie for the purpose of
coining these half dismes. Although the entire mintage of 1,500 was
presented to Jefferson by Mint Director Rittenhouse, he obviously passed
some on, for they were used by General Washington as presentation
pieces for visiting dignitaries and VIPs. Many were given to
acquaintances in Virginia, and no more were coined. Breen estimates
that the majority of these coins entered circulation with about 200-250
known today, generally in low grades. About 20 uncirculated examples are
included in that figure. These coins were not fully struck up
originally, so that even uncirculated examples will not show full
breast or leg feathers on the eagle. The hair curls above and below
Liberty's ear will also be partly flat. Adjustment marks are common and
should not be considered a defect. Cast counterfeits are known. They can
be identified by being heavier than authorized and having vertical
rather than diagonally reeded edges.These coins are generally collected
as patterns and are classified as Judd-7. As the prototype five-cent
piece, the half disme was replaced in 1794 by the first regular issue
half dime, the Flowing Hair type.
President Washington, in his fourth Annual Address to
Congress, November 6, 1792, spoke of "a small beginning in the
coinage of half dismes, the want of small coins in circulation calling
the first attention to them." A small beginning perhaps, but of
great national significance, as the prerogative to coin precious metals
has historically been an expression of national sovereignty. A period
painting by John Ward Dunsmore of New York portrays General and Mrs.
Washington, Alexander Hamilton and wife, Thomas Jefferson, David
Rittenhouse, Tobias Lear, Henry Voight and Adam Eckfeldt inspecting
these first coins.
Because of this historic context, these diminutive
pieces are among the most prized of American silver coins.
SPECIFICATIONS:
Diameter: 17.5 millimeters Weight: 1.35 grams Composition:
.8924 silver, .1076 copper Edge: Diagonally reeded. Net Weight:
.03873 ounce pure silver
BIBLIOGRAPHY:
Breen, Walter, Walter Breen's Complete Encyclopedia of U.S.
and Colonial Coins, F.C.I. Press/Doubleday, New York, 1988.
Taxay, Don, The U.S. Mint and Coinage, Arco Publishing
Co., New York, 1966.
Judd, J. Hewitt M.D., United States Pattern, Experimental
and Trial Pieces, 7th Edition, Western Publishing Co., Racine, WI,
1982.
Valentine, D.W., The United States Half Dimes, American
Numismatic Society, New York, 1931.
Stewart, Frank, History of the First United States Mint,
Frank H. Stewart Electric Company, Philadelphia, 1924.
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