1853-55 DIME SEATED LIBERTY WITH ARROWS
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. All that glitters isn't
gold, sometimes it's silver. This twist on the age-old maxim was to
plague U.S. coinage from its very beginnings. The ever-fluctuating
prices of silver and gold, coupled with Congress' misguided coinage law
and the Mint's internal problems, constantly frustrated efforts to keep
an adequate supply of precious metal coins in circulation. This problem
would last for years.
The bimetallic standard instituted by the Coinage Act of
1792 defined the content of the standard gold dollar at 24.75 grains
and the silver dollar at 371.25 grains. In 1792, this 15-to-1 ratio
between the metals was in line with the world market. Within a few
years, however, the world price of gold began to rise. The United
States's largest gold coin, the $10 eagle, was hoarded and melted as
fast as it was minted. U.S. silver dollars, containing slightly more
silver than the circulating legal-tender Spanish dollars, also saw
melting and exportation, and even the fractional silver coins were
affected. The situation got so bad that by 1804, President Thomas
Jefferson ordered a halt to both eagle and dollar production. For at
least a decade, except for half eagles and half dollars, which were
primarily used in bank-to-bank transactions, mintages of all U.S.
precious-metal coins were minuscule. From about 1800 to 1834, gold
coins were rarely seen in circulation at all, and only Spanish silver
pieces and state-bank fractional notes saw any appreciable use. By
1820, 98% of the U.S. gold coin mintage had been destroyed. Fifteen
years would pass before gold coins circulated again.
In 1834, apparently to appease Eastern banking and
Southern mining interests, Congress reduced the amount of gold in the
standard dollar to 23.2 grains and changed the ratio to 16-to-1. With
the prevailing worldwide ratio at that time of around 15.6 to 1, this
had the effect of returning gold coins to circulation, as they were now
worth marginally less than the equivalent amount of U.S. silver coins.
The higher value silver coins should have gone into the melting pot, but
a combination of factors, including vast imports of silver from Mexican
mines and the return to circulation of U.S. silver coins that were
formerly used as bank reserves, forestalled the inevitable for a
decade. By 1844, though, U.S. exports of silver exceeded imports, and
silver coins once again started to disappear. A few years later, things
would really begin to get out of hand.
Following the discovery of gold at Sutter's Mill in
1848, thousands of fortune-seekers swarmed to California, transforming
it almost overnight from a sleepy U.S. territory, newly wrested from
Mexico, into the nation's 31st state. The
"Forty-Niners," and others who followed them, mined enormous
quantities of gold, more gold than the world had ever seen up until that
time. The output of the mines was just too much for the markets to
easily absorb: Gold's price relative to silver began to fall, and then,
melting and hoarding of silver coins took on really massive proportions.
By 1853, it took $1.06 in U.S. gold coins to buy $1.00 in silver coins.
U.S. silver coins practically vanished from circulation, leaving behind
only an assortment of well-worn Spanish pieces and the tiny "fish
scale" trimes, which had a metal content well below their face
value.
Congress was ultimately forced to address the problem.
Extended debate ensued, mostly over the issue of debasing the coinage.
Although gold coins were effectively debased in 1834, many legislators
ignored this fact, as they vehemently protested lowering the amount of
silver in the fractional coinage. Finally, a compromise was struck. This
was the Act of February 21, 1853, whereby the amount of silver in the
fractional coins was reduced by 6.9%, but the old standard was retained
for the silver dollar as a sign of Congress' continued allegiance to
bimetallism. The half dollar, quarter dollar, dime and half dime were
affected by this change. To facilitate the withdrawal from circulation
of the heavier, pre-1853 silver coins, a readily distinguishable change
was needed; but to maintain confidence in the nation's money, it was
thought necessary to retain the design of the coins then familiar to
the public.
Since 1838, the motif used on U.S. silver coins was the
Seated Liberty design by Christian Gobrecht. It depicted Liberty,
modeled after the British image of Britannia, seated on a rock
surrounded by thirteen stars. On the dime, the reverse featured a
wreath, with the inscription UNITED STATES OF AMERICA outside and the
denomination ONE DIME inside. Officials decided to add arrowheads on
either side of the date to identify the new, lower weight coins. Mint
Director George N. Eckert instructed Chief Engraver James B. Longacre
to modify the dies.
The first Arrows dimes were proofs, part of five sets
made of the new coinage. Regular production began in April of 1853, and
the coins literally poured out of the mints. Out of a total of close to
21.5 million pieces minted from 1853 to 1855, Philadelphia made over
12 million in 1853 alone. Congress' plan evidently worked. For the first
time in U.S. history, there was an adequate supply of U.S. fractional
coins for commerce. For the most part, foreign silver coins were quickly
withdrawn from circulation and recoined into U.S. issues. While many of
the first dimes of this type were initially hoarded, their appearance in
vast numbers soon convinced the hoarders to release their stockpiles.
The three-year series contains five date and mint
combinations, as Arrows dimes were minted in Philadelphia (no mintmark)
every year and in New Orleans (O) in 1853 and `54. Mintmarks can be
found above the bow of the wreath. The 1853 Philadelphia issue appears
with the most frequency in gem uncirculated, while the New Orleans issue
of that year is the rarest of the series, particularly in mint state.
The 1854-O also appears occasionally in high grade; a small hoard of
about 18 pieces turned up in 1981. In addition to the first 1853 coins,
an unknown but apparently tiny number of proofs were also struck in 1854
and `55. While all five issues are collected by date and mint, the main
interest in this short series is from type collectors pursuing one of
the five major varieties of Seated Liberty dimes. When grading this
design, wear will first show on Liberty's knee, breast and head. On the
reverse, check the highpoints of the bow and leaves.
In 1856, Mint Director Eckert's replacement, James Ross
Snowden, directed the arrows removed from the coinage, as very little
of the old-tenor pieces remained in circulation. Seated Liberty dimes
continued to be struck at the Philadelphia and New Orleans Mints as
well as at the newly built San Francisco Mint until 1892, when the
design type was replaced by Charles E. Barber's Liberty Head.
SPECIFICATIONS:
Diameter: 17.9 millimeters Weight: 2.49 grams Composition:
.900 silver, .100 coppe Edge: Reeded Net Weight: .07204
ounce pure silver
BIBLIOGRAPHY:
Ahwash, Kamal M., Encyclopedia of United States Liberty
Seated Dimes 1837-1891, Kamal Press, Wallingford, PA, 1974.
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 Small Coins
and Fractional Paper Currency of the United States, John Wiley
& Sons, London, 1930.
Evans, George C., Illustrated History of the United States
Mint, Revised Edition, Philadelphia, 1893.
Greer, Brian, The Complete Guide to Liberty Seated Dimes,
Virginia Beach, VA, 1992.
Yeoman, R.S., A Guide Book of United States Coins, 47th
Edition, Western Publishing Co., Racine, WI, 1993.
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