1796-97 HALF DIME DRAPED BUST LIBERTY SMALL EAGLE
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. One of the first acts of
a sovereign nation has always been to establish a system of currency for
use in commercial transactions. In the fledgling United States, this
was doubly important. Although the accepted standard of value was the
Spanish silver dollar and its fractional pieces of eight, English coins
of pounds, shillings and pence also were in use throughout the young
nation. Efficient trade was hampered at every turn, particularly
between the states, as each valued the Spanish coins differently in
relation to English issues. By the end of the 1780s, much discussion
ensued concerning the necessity and structure of a reliable,
non-fluctuating system of coinage.
Thomas Jefferson, along with Alexander Hamilton and
financier Robert Morris, had long advocated the use of the decimal
system. Introduced by the Dutch inventor Simon Stevin van Brugghe, it
used whole numbers to describe fractions and was translated into
English in 1608 as Disme: the art of tenths, or, Decimall
arithmeticke. Jefferson saw decimal coins as the solution to the
conflicting foreign systems already circulating in North America. The
gold ten-dollar piece would be roughly equal in value to the British
double guinea. The silver dollar and its fractions would correspond to
the Spanish 8 Reales. Copper cents would be equivalent to English
halfpennies.
The Mint Act passed by Congress on April 2, 1792,
provided that ". . . the money of account of the United States
shall be expressed in dollars or units, dismes or tenths, cents or
hundredths, . . . a disme being the tenth part of a dollar . . ."
It was fitting that this country, born of revolution, should use a
revolutionary system for coinage.
The first decimal coins struck were the William Russell
Birch designed pattern half dismes of 1792. Only fifteen hundred were
minted. Most likely, as the late Walter Breen postulated, minting half
dismes was the most economical use possible of the $75 worth of silver
bullion that was on hand at the time. But this small mintage was only
an experiment.
It wasn't until 1794 that the regular issue of the half
dime began. Robert Scot's flowing hair design was widely criticized for
its scrawny eagle and its portrayal of Miss Liberty in a "fright
wig." (Although Scot's designunlike the 1792 coinsdid not display
the denomination, the spelling of "disme" would evolve over
time to the anglicized "dime.")
After the poor reception afforded Scot's creation, Mint
Director Henry DeSaussure addressed the immediate need to improve the
coinage. Going outside the Mint, he engaged artist Gilbert Stuart to
submit a sketch for a new Liberty head. Stuart modeled his Liberty
after the buxom Mrs. William Bingham of Newport, Rhode Island. Using
Stuart's sketch, Scot and John Eckstein engraved the dies for the new
half dime.
Released in 1796, the coin's obverse design consists of
a draped bust profile of Liberty facing right, with flowing hair secured
by a ribbon. The word LIBERTY is above her head, and the date is below
the bust. Stars flank each side. The 1796 half dime has eight stars on
the left and seven on the right representing the fifteen states,
including the new states of Vermont (#14) and Kentucky (#15). In 1797,
a fifteen-star variety was struck, and later a sixteenth star (eight
right, eight left) was added after Tennessee was admitted to the Union
on June 1, 1796. Director DeSaussure's successor, Elias Boudinot,
realized that they couldn't go on adding stars ad infinitum, so the
last variety of 1797 had only thirteen stars (seven right, six left).
From this time on, thirteen stars would be used to symbolize the union
of states. The coin's reverse depicts an open wreath surrounding a small
eagle that is perched on a cloud. The eagle is smaller than the one on
the Flowing Hair design of 1794-95, but it has a fuller breast. The
inscription UNITED STATES OF AMERICA surrounds the wreath.
There were 54,757 half dimes of this design minted. Only
a few varieties exist, and all are rare. Even type collectors find this
issue a challenge. In 1796, there is a late die-state example with a
broken "B" in Liberty that appears as "LIKERTY," and
an overdate, 1796/5. The 1797 coins were minted from only three obverse
dies having either fifteen, sixteen or thirteen stars. No proofs were
made, but supposedly there is a single 1797 fifteen-star prooflike
presentation piece that can be traced back to Mint Director Boudinot.
It was sent to Matthew Boulton in England as an example of the Mint's
capabilities. It was last reported in the collection of Harold Bareford
but did not appear when his coins were auctioned in 1981.
One reason for the paucity and low quality of coinage
during this period was the yearly outbreak of yellow fever in
Philadelphia during the summer and fall months. The epidemic was
particularly ferocious from 1797 through 1804, and during some of these
years the Mint was temporarily closed throughout the yellow fever
season. Key employeesengraver Joseph Wright and assayer Joseph
Whiteheadsuccumbed in 1793, and Mint Treasurer Dr. Nicholas Way was
felled in 1797. Official procedures were instituted for closing the
Mint in these emergencies, including provisions to pay off the workers
and instructions for coining or securing the bullion that remained on
hand. All dies were to be packaged and sent to the Bank of the United
States for safe keeping.
It should be noted that most Draped Bust Small Eagle half dimes
are usually very weakly struck, particularly in the center of the coin.
This presents a grading challenge, as the typical specimen may grade
only Fine. Wear first shows on the hair above Liberty's forehead, at
the hair over her ear and shoulder and on the area where the bust meets
the drapery line. On the reverse, check the center of the eagle's
breast and the ribbon.
Draped Bust half dimes typically show adjustment marks
made with a file to bring slightly overweight coins to the proper
standard. This process of adjustment was done before the coin blanks or
planchets were struck by dies into coins. Each blank was
weighed, and overweight pieces were filed with strokes across the face
of the blank, while underweight pieces were melted. Though adjustment
marks are not a factor in grading, they must be recognized so that they
are not interpreted as damage to the coin.
No half dimes were struck in 1798 and 1799. The coin was
again minted in 1800 with the same Draped Bust obverse, but with a new
reverse by Robert Scot that copied the heraldic eagle device from the
Great Seal of the United States.
SPECIFICATIONS:
Diameter: 16.5 millimeters Weight: 1.35 grams Composition:
.8924 silver, .1076 copper Edge: Reeded Net Weight: .0387
ounce pure silver
BIBLIOGRAPHY:
Bowers, Q. David, United States Coins by Design Types,
Bowers & Merena Galleries, Wolfeboro, NH, 1986.
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.
Valentine, Daniel W., The United States Half Dimes,
Quarterman Publications, Inc., Lawrence, MA, 1975.
Yeoman, R.S., A Guide Book of United States Coins, 48th
Edition. Western Publishing Co., Racine, WI, 1994
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