1796-97 DIME DRAPED BUST LIBERTY SMALL EAGLE 
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. Although the dime is an
essential part of the decimal coinage system, it was one of the last
coins issued by the U.S. Mint when operations first began. By the time
it made its debut in 1796, as the Draped Bust/Small Eagle dime, the Mint
had already been making copper cents and half cents for three years;
silver dollars, half dollars and half dimes for two years; and even two
gold coinsthe eagle and half eaglefor a year. The only other coins
delayed, like the dime, until 1796, were the quarter dollar and quarter
eagle.
It's not as if the dime was an afterthought. Actually,
Thomas Jefferson had called for such a coin as far back as 1783, as part
of a proposed decimal system, and was joined in his advocacy by
Benjamin Franklin, Alexander Hamilton and the man who would become the
first Mint Director, eminent scientist David Rittenhouse. The decimal
system was gradually gaining acceptance for use with calculations, but
it had not yet been used for any nation's monetary structure. The
founding fathers believed that not only was decimal coinage an
efficient, workable method for commerce, but it also symbolized a break
from the Old World.
Hamilton, the nation's first Treasury Secretary,
bolstered this view in 1791 in his formal report to Congress, outlining
a plan for a national Mint and coinage. He recommended the issuance of
coins in six denominations including a silver piece "which shall
be, in weight and value, one tenth part of a silver unit or dollar."
He suggested that the dollar be called the "unit," with its
tenth part being known as simply a "tenth." These names never
took hold, but the basic Mint Act of April 2, 1792, did include
provision for both a silver dollar and a coin one-tenth thereof to be
called a "disme." The term dismepronounced the same as "dime"
and later anglicized to be spelled the same, is French for "decimal."
It first gained wide usage in 1585 when Dutch mathematician Simon
Stevin published a pamphletlater translated into French, and then into
English as
Disme: the art of tenths, or, Decimall arithmeticke.
The word "disme" never appeared on a
regular-issue U.S. coin. But in 1792, before the start of official
federal coinage, about 1,500 half dismes and a handful of dismes were
struck bearing the statement of value in this now strange-seeming
phraseology. Although these are authorized U.S. issues, they are
generally regarded as patterns or provisional pieces. Only three 1792
dismes are known today in silverwith about 15 others struck in copper.
After that tentative start, four years would pass before the Mint
produced the first 10 cent coins intended for circulation. The dime (or
disme) remained on the back burner. The dollar, perceived as the most
prestigious coin of the new silver issues, was made first. Then, when
production problems forced the Mint to stop making dollars, it turned
instead to half dollars and half dimes.
Why no dimes? Numismatic researcher R.W. Julian
attributes the delayin large measure to lack of public demand for this
small silver coin, either from merchants and their customers or from
bullion depositors. Commercial needs were met adequately by the large
numbers of Spanish reales then in circulation: The 1-real coin, worth
one "bit" or 12 1/2 cents, provided a convenient and readily
available means to pay for small purchases. Meanwhile, depositors who
left silver bullion with the Mint, seeking silver coinage in return,
much preferred large coinsespecially silver dollarsto small ones like
the dime.
By the time production of dimes finally began, the Mint
had already modified the original designs of the other silver coins, so
the dime denomination missed an entire cycle. The first regular issue
silver coins had featured the so-called Flowing Hair portrait of Miss
Liberty, but by 1796 this likeness had given way to a more sedate Draped
Bust portrait, and that's the one that appeared on the very first
dimes.
The Draped Bust/Small Eagle design by Mint Chief
Engraver Robert Scot featured a buxom portrait of Liberty, with her
flowing hair tied by a ribbon and her neckline covered with drapery,
encircled by stars at the sides, the inscription LIBERTY above and the
date below. Pieces dated 1796 have 15 starsone for each state in the
Union then. In 1797, some dimes were struck with 16 stars (reflecting
Tennessee's admission as the 16th state) and some with 13, symbolizing
the 13 original states, after the Mint abandoned the idea of adding an
extra star for each new state. The reverse depicts a small,
spread-winged eagle perched upon clouds and surrounded by palm and olive
branches. Encircling this is the motto UNITED STATES OF AMERICA. The
coin carries no statement of valuecuriously, the Mint Act of 1792
required that only the copper cent and half-cent be inscribed with
denominations.
Liberty's portrait was based on a drawing of
Philadelphia socialite Ann Willing Bingham, one of the most beautiful
women of her time. The drawing was prepared by portraitist Gilbert
Stuartreportedly at the urging of President George Washington himself,
who felt the early coins were in need of artistic improvement. Stuart's
sketch was translated to plaster by artist John Eckstein , and the dies
were then executed by Scot. When grading this design, wear will first
show on Liberty's bust, shoulder and the hair above the ear and at the
forehead. On the reverse, check the eagle's head and wing tops.
This first regular issue dime was minted for only two
years; in 1798, the small, naturalistic eagle gave way to a larger
heraldic version, creating a brand new type. During this brief run, the
Mint produced a total of 47,396 pieces. There are only three basic
varieties in the series: the 1796, the 1797 with 16 stars and the 1797
with 13 stars. Thus, some collectors pursue complete sets, despite the
high cost of each component. Many, however, treat this as a type coin
and acquire just one specimen to represent the series. Although not
much usable research on these early dimes was available to numismatists
for years, present-day variety specialists recognize eight varieties
(six for 1796, two for 1797)
delineated in Early United States Dimes, 1796-1837,
published in 1984 by the John Reich Collectors Society.
Although Mint records show a slightly higher output in
1797, the late Walter Breen, a noted numismatic scholar, speculated
that some dimes made in 1797 may have been dated 1796. Dimes dated 1797
are rarer across the grade spectrum than the first-year pieces, and
particularly so in Mint State. At least several dozen uncirculated 1796s
exista few with prooflike surfaces, possibly made as presentation
pieces for VIPs. The famed collector, Colonel E.H.R. Green, son of
"The Witch of Wall Street," fabulously wealthy Hetty Green,
possessed a small hoard of uncirculated 1796s, all of which were
dispersed after his death in 1936.
SPECIFICATIONS:
Diameter: 19 millimeters Weight: 2.70 grams Composition:
.8924 silver, .1076 copper Edge: Reeded Net Weight: .07747
ounce pure silver
BIBLIOGRAPHY:
Bowers, Q. David, United States Coins by Design Types,
Bowers and 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.
Davis, David J.; Logan, Russell J.; Lovejoy, Allen F.;
McCloskey, John W.; Subjack, William L.,
Early United States Dimes, 1796-1837, John Reich Collectors
Society, Ypsilanti, MI, 1984.
Taxay, Don, The U.S. Mint and Coinage. Arco Publishing
Co. Inc., New York, 1966.
Yeoman, R.S., A Guide Book of United States Coins, 48th
Edition. Western Publishing Co., Racine, WI, 1994
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