1796 QUARTER DOLLAR 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. On September 17, 1796,
George Washington delivered his now famous Farewell Address in which he
cautioned that "it is our true policy to steer clear of permanent
alliance with any portion of the foreign world." This policy of
"no entangling alliances," as it became better known, was to
be the dominant theme of American foreign policy for the next one
hundred and fifty years, right up to the start of World War II.
At the same time, the fledgling Philadelphia Mint was
preparing to manufacture a new denomination , the quarter dollar,
authorized by the Mint Act of 1792. It would eventually be recognized
and accepted throughout the world. It is difficult to imagine today how
seriously coinage was regarded two hundred years ago. Officials
understood that once coins left the mint, they would become metallic
emissaries of the new nation. This is why so much attention was given to
gold and silver coins weighing exactly what they were supposed to
weigh, no more and no less. Most educated people of the day understood
that a poorly designed coin would reflect badly on their country, just
as a handsomely designed coin of proper weight and fineness would be
respected worldwide.
The design of the 1796 quarter had its genesis in the
almost universal dislike for the previous coin designs. Earlier copper
coinage, such as the Chain cent and Wreath cent had not been well
received by the public, and the Flowing Hair design of the silver coins
was widely criticized. To avoid such public embarrassment with the new
design, Mint Director Henry DeSaussure engaged renowned portraitist
Gilbert Stuart, who used as his model the prominent Philadelphia
socialite Mrs. William Bingham (nee Ann Willing). The likeness of the
buxom Mrs. Bingham was first applied to the Draped Bust dollar issued
late in 1795.
But all did not go well in transferring Mrs. Bingham's
likeness into coined form. The rather bland portrait that ended up on
the quarters of 1796 did not resemble the beautiful model that Stuart
sketched. In fact, Stuart was so disappointed with the results that his
name was forgotten for almost a hundred years in connection with the
coins, until 1887, when an article in the
American Journal of Numismatics was published, aquainting
collectors with this fact. The failure of transferring Stuart's sketch
into coinage can be laid at the feet of one Robert Scot. Scot was a
banknote plate artist who the Mint hired as an engraver. It was later
found out he could neither sink a die nor make a device punch. Given
Scot's incompetency as well as that of his assistant, John Eckstein, it
is a wonder the coins turned as well as they did. The obverse design
features the portrait, encircled by 15 stars, with the inscription
LIBERTY above the head and the date below. The reverse depicts a small
eagle on cloud-shaped cushions, within a wreath of olive and palm
branches. The inscription UNITED STATES OF AMERICA encircles the wreath.
Only 6,146 of the new quarters were struck in 1796.
There are only two varieties known, one with a low 6 in the date and the
other with a high 6, the Low 6 variety being much the rarer of the two.
Collectors generally want only one coin for a type set, and herein lies
the enduring popularity of the 1796 quarter. While it is not a
particularly rare coin for the era, anyone who attempts to complete a
type set of United States coins must have a 1796 quarter, as this design
was made in only this one year. The next design type (not coined until
1804) retained the draped bust design on the obverse but replaced the
small eagle of 1796 with the heraldic eagle that was then current on
the other silver coins of the day.
No proofs were struck from the 1796 quarter dies, but
several presentation strikings are known, coins that evidence an
inordinate amount of care in their manufacture and exhibit much stronger
striking details than usually seen. The subject of proofs, however, is
one that surfaced in the early 1940s when Colonel E.H.R. Green's estate
was liquidated. Colonel Green was a very colorful character who
collected among other things, coins, stamps, railroad cars and
pornography. Among his immense numismatic holdings were some 100 high
grade 1796 quarters. Half of these coins were alleged to be "proofs,"
the other half regular business strikes. Philadelphia dealer James G.
Macallister offered these for sale around the New York area in the 1940s
at $90 each for the
"Frosty Uncs." and $125 each for the "proofs."
The 1796 quarter is one of the few United States coins
whose value is greater than its population would indicate. Decades of
publicity and the need for the `96 quarter for type sets has kept its
price high relative to other series and individual rarities. Its
reputation and value has even inspired counterfeiting. Very convincing
counterfeits surfaced at the 1982 A.N.A. convention in Boston. These
are cast copies of the rare Low 6 variety. They are copied from a low
grade genuine coin, but all show the same field marks in front of the
face, a nick just left of the 12th star, a nick above ER in AMERICA and
another on the final A in AMERICA.
When grading a 1796 quarter, look for wear on the obverse on the
highest points of the hair above the forehead, followed by the shoulder
and bust line. On the reverse, friction is first seen on the breast of
the eagle and next at the top edges of the wings. But even on the
finest specimens, head detail is likely to be flat on the eagle. This is
not due to die wear, but rather design opposition, caused by the
eagle's head being directly opposite the shoulder of Liberty on the
obverse. Adjustment marks are also common on these early silver coins.
These were created by filing the planchets prior to striking to reduce
the weight of the coined product. In this rather crude way, the Mint
made sure that each gold or silver coin had exactly the amount of
precious metal stipulated by law.
The 1796 quarter dollar was created with great care and
considerable effort, and while the coins that were produced fell short
of some people's expectations, the one year type coin has attained a
popularity with a broad base of collectors that few other United States
coins can equal.
SPECIFICATIONS:
Diameter: 27.5 millimeters Weight: 6.74 grams Composition:
.8924 silver, .1076 copper Edge: Reeded Net Weight: .1934 ounce
pure silver
BIBILIOGRAPHY:
American Numismatic Association, Official A.N.A. Grading
Standards for United States Coins, Western Publishing Company,
Racine, WI, 1977.
Bowers, Q. David, Abe Kosoff: Dean of Numismatics,
Bowers and Merena Galleries, Wolfeboro, NH, 1985.
Bowers, Q. David, Silver Dollars and Trade Dollars of the
United States, Bowers and Merena Galleries, Wolfeboro, NH, 1993.
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,
New York, 1966.
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