1853-55 HALF DIME SEATED LIBERTY, WITH ARROWS 
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. When John Marshall
discovered a few nuggets of gold on the American River in northern
California in 1848, no one could have predicted just how much precious
metal lay waiting to be found and how widespread the effects of his
discovery really would be. But gold soon flooded the monetary markets
of the world, and this overabundance of the metal caused its price to
fall, which in turn had the effect of raising the price of silver as
reckoned in gold dollars. As the price of silver rose relative to gold,
the intrinsic value of U.S. silver coins increased above their face
value. Soon, U.S. silver coins were melted when found, and by 1851 they
were no longer found.
This lack of subsidiary silver coinage created chaos among
merchants and bankers who were forced to make change with silver
three-cent pieces, heavily worn dimes and half dimes and Spanish
fractional silver. As the voice of the people, Congress quickly
responded to the complaints of the merchant class, and bills were
introduced and fiercely debated for two years before action was finally
taken to resolve the problem. Many in Congress were genuinely concerned
about "debasement" of the country's silver coinage, the
solution most commonly suggested to remedy the situation. The idea of a
fiduciary coinage was a new concept at the time, and it was several
decades until most Congressmen were comfortable with the idea that a
coin need not contain a full measure of precious metal to be a valid
circulating medium. In the 1850s, many inside and outside of Congress
considered the idea of fiduciary coinage to be basically dishonest.
Perhaps the most ill-informed opponent of fiduciary coinage was future
President Andrew Johnson, who called the bill introduced to reduce the
silver content of the half dime, dime, quarter and half dollar "the
merest quackery" and "charlatanism." However, after two
years of postponements and three consecutive days of debate, the bill
authorizing a weight reduction of 6.9% in these silver coins was signed
into law February 21, 1853.
Much depended on the new coins entering the channels of commerce
as quickly as possible. Officials agreed that the new, lower weight
coins should have some distinctive design or mark that would enable the
general populace to easily distinguish them from the earlier
Gobrecht-Hughes designed Seated Liberty coinage that contained a greater
amount of silver. Even Congress recognized the need for the new coins
to have a modified design, and the following month a law was passed that
authorized the Mint to temporarily employ such artists as would be
needed to alter the dies for the coins affected. But Chief Engraver
Longacre knew that the press of time would not allow any drastic
redesigning or the hiring and training of outside artisans. All there
was time to do was hand punch arrowheads on either side of the date and
add a "glory" of rays on the reverse dies of the quarter and
half dollar. With only this minor change in design, the grading
parameters remain the same as for the earlier issues. On the obverse,
check the high points of the breast and knee for wear; on the reverse,
the ribbon bow and tips of the leaves.
Longacre added arrows to 78 new obverse dies for 1853
half dimes, 18 for New Orleans, and 2 for San Francisco. The San
Francisco dies were actually shipped to the Assay Office there, just in
case they could procure parting acids before the branch mint opened the
next year. These dies went unused, but if they had been struck, such
coins would have certainly been a numismatic curiosity: regular U.S.
coins struck from dies in a facility that was not an official Mint.
More than 13 million Arrows half dimes were struck in
Philadelphia in 1853, more than half the total output of 25,060,020 for
the three years arrows were used. Only Philadelphia and New Orleans
produced the issue, and the New Orleans pieces are significantly
scarcer than their Philadelphia counterparts. Proofs were struck in all
three years but are of the utmost rarity.
Arrows half dimes are easily collected in all but the
highest grades. There are no real "stoppers" in the three-year set, but
the New Orleans coins are considerably more elusive and expensive than
those from the Philadelphia Mint. For decades coin dealers would not
stock low grade Arrows half dimes because they were considered so
common. This disdain carried over to higher grade coins as well, and it
has only been in recent years that type collectors have elevated this
series to respectability because of the need for gem coins for type
sets (few of which had survived). As one might expect, the wholesale
removal of all pre-1853 silver coins did create several rarities, and
in the half dime series 1853-O Without Arrows is a significant rarity
that has sometimes been counterfeited by altering an 1858-O coin.
In 1856, after three years with arrows on either side of
the date, the half dime was returned to its pre-1853 design, but with
the new reduced weight. It remained unchanged until 1860. The Mint Act
of 1853 achieved what Congress and the Mint set out to do; it reduced
the amount of silver in the subsidiary coinage to a level where it was
not profitable to melt, hoard or export these denominations, and small
change circulated once again. The Act also established a fiduciary
coinage in the United States for the first time. However, the profit
the Mint made on the production of these coins (or seignorage as it is
known) was minimal, and rising silver prices through the remainder of
the 1850s made the Mint's profits less and less. By the time of the
Civil War, so little was made on the production of silver coins that it
looked as if melting and exporting would resume if the silver price
continued to climb. Hoarding did indeed occur, but not because of
rising silver prices. Rather, Arrows half dimes and all silver coins
were hoarded during the Civil War simply because the coins had silver in
them in any amountthis was how great uncertainty was on the part of the
general populace regarding the outcome of the War. The issue of
fiduciary coinage would be debated for the next century, but it was the
Arrows coinage of 1853-55 that fired the opening shot in the
controversy that was not fully resolved until all precious metal was
finally removed from circulating coinage in 1970.
SPECIFICATIONS:
Diameter: 15.5 millimeters Weight: 1.24 grams Composition:
.900 silver, .100 copper Edge: Reeded Net Weight: .035 ounce
pure silver
BIBLIOGRAPHY:
Blythe, Al, The Complete Guide to Liberty Seated Half Dimes,
DLRC Press, Virginia Beach, VA, 1992.
Breen, Walter, Walter Breen's Complete Encyclopedia of U.S.
and Colonial Coins, F.C.I. Press/Doubleday, New York, 1988.
Carothers, Neil, Fractional Money. A History of the Small
Coins and Fractional Paper Currencv of the United States, John
Wiley & Sons, London, 1930.
Taxay, Don, The U.S. Mint and Coinage, Arco Publishing,
New York, 1966.
Valentine, D.W., The United States Half Dimes, American
Numismatic Society, New York, 1931.
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