1804-07 QUARTER DOLLAR DRAPED BUST LIBERTY HERALDIC 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. In modern times, the
quarter dollar has established itself as a workhorse in the U.S. coinage
system. It plays a vital role in turning the wheels of commerce, and
its annual production routinely tops 1 billion. By contrast, the quarter
was all but invisible during the early years of federal coinage. The
United States Mint delayed its introduction until 1796, making it one
of the last U.S.coins to debut. Then, after striking just 6,146
examples of that date, the Mint suspended production of 25-cent pieces
for nearly a decade.
As numismatic researcher R.W. Julian has observed,
quarter dollars were "orphans" in the new nation's monetary
system. "Few were struck and even fewer were seen in the
marketplace actually being used by merchant or citizen." In large
measure, the early public indifference to this now-essential coin was
attributable to the fact that Americans didn't need it at that time.
The Spanish two-reales piece, which circulated widely in the infant
United States, had exactly the same purchasing power25 centsand then as
now, people tended to favor things (including coins) with which they
were more familiar. Under the circumstances, there was no particular
urgency to strike quarter dollars at all, as evidenced by the fact that
from 1796 to 1814, a period of nearly 20 years, the Mint produced
quarters for only five dates and in quantities totaling barely half a
million pieces. Indeed, the paltry output in 1796 seems to have been
intended primarily to establish the denomination's existence, just to
show the flag, so to speak.
U.S. coin designs underwent frequent changes during the
nation's formative years, and because of its late introduction, the
quarter missed the very first cycle in this process: Unlike the dollar,
half dollar and half dime, the 25-cent piece never appeared with the
Flowing Hair portrait of Miss Liberty. By 1796, the Mint had already
replaced that design with a new Draped Bust likeness of Liberty. A
small, naturalistic eagle, much like the one on the Flowing Hair
coinage, continued to grace the reverses of the first Draped Bust
issues. This included the quarter dollar of 1796, which turned out to be
a one-year type coin.
After completing the minuscule mintage of the first U.S.
quarter, Mint officials seemingly forgot about the 25-cent
denomination. It didn't reappear in the nation's coinage lineup until
1804, and by then the "small eagle" of the first silver coins
had given way to a larger heraldic eagle based on the Great Seal of
the United States. The Draped Bust image of Liberty is essentially the
same in both series and was fashioned by noted portraitist Gilbert
Stuart, possibly at the urging of President George Washington himself.
It's said that Stuart's model was Ann Willing Bingham of Philadelphia, a
socialite regarded as one of the most beautiful women of her day. His
sketch was converted to plaster by artist John Eckstein of Providence,
Rhode Island, and coinage dies then were executed by Mint Chief Engraver
Robert Scot. Stuart reportedly felt that the execution was more akin to
the type performed by a hangman, killing off the artistry of his
portrait. For that reason, he disavowed his connection with the design.
In his highly regarded book Numismatic Art in
America, Boston museum curator Cornelius Vermeule likens the Draped
Bust figure to "a buxom Roman matron." Her long, elegant
tresses are tied back with a ribbon and ample cleavage is visible above
a fold of drapery in her gown. This right-facing portrait is encircled
by LIBERTY above, the date below and stars along the left and right
borders. On the Small Eagle quarter of 1796, the obverse displays 15
stars, one for each state in the Union at that time. By 1804, the Mint
had settled on 13 stars representing the 13 original states; the notion
of adding a star every time a state joined the Union had been scrapped
as an impractical indulgence. Thirteen stars appear on the reverse of
the Heraldic Eagle quarter, as well, tucked into the space above the
eagle's head. There are clouds above the eagle, while UNITED STATES OF
AMERICA and 25 C. are inscribed around the periphery. A shield is
superimposed upon the eagle's breast, a banner in its beak proclaims E
PLURIBUS UNUM and it grasps symbolic items: a sheaf of arrows and an
olive branch. In designing the coin, Chief Engraver Scot chose to place
the warlike arrows in the right (or "dexter") claw and the
olive branch of peace in the left (or
"sinister") claw. This reverses the traditional American
priorities, since the right claw is dominant in heraldry and thus more
properly suited for a symbol of peace, not war. Areas on this design to
first show wear are Liberty's bust and shoulder and her hair above the
forehead. On the reverse, check the eagle's head and the tops of the
wings.
The Draped Bust/Heraldic Eagle quarter remained in
production for only four years, and during that time its annual mintage
never reached a quarter of a million. Only 6,738 examples were struck in
1804, making that the key date of the series. Thereafter, the output
topped 100,000 every year, reaching a high of 220,643 in 1807. Combined
production for all four years totaled only 554,899. Mint records make
no mention of proofs.
Heraldic Eagle quarters are exceedingly scarce in mint
condition and all but unheard of in grade levels above Mint State-65. A
complete date-and-mint set actually includes five coins, since 1806
quarters come with both a normal date and a 6-over-5 overdate. Although
it wouldn't be an impossible task to assemble a set of all five issues,
many prefer to treat this as a type coin and acquire just one
high-grade example to represent the series as a whole. For those quarter
devotees who prefer complexity to simplicity, the late Walter Breen, a
renowned numismatic scholar, identified 19 different die varieties for
the series.
After completing production of quarters for 1807, the
Mint put this underused denomination back on the shelf for another long
hiatus. People still preferred the Spanish and Mexican two-reales
coins. As a further disincentive to production, the few quarters
already issued were being widely hoarded, rather than spent, because
they contained more silver than the two-reales pieces. Despite being
lighter in weight, the Spanish coins were still legal tender at par, so
it made more sense to spend those and save the quarters. The Mint
wouldn't issue quarters again until 1815, and when it did, they would
come in a new version: John Reich's Capped Bust design.
SPECIFICATIONS:
Diameter: Approximately 27.5 millimeters Weight:
6.74 grams Composition: .8924 silver, .1076 copper Edge:
Reeded Net Weight: .19338 ounce pure silver
BIBLIOGRAPHY:
Bowers, Q. David, United States Coins by Design Types, An
Action Guide for the Collector and Investor, Bowers and Merena,
Wolfeboro, NH, 1986.
Breen, Walter, Walter Breen's Complete Encyclopedia of U.S.
and Colonial Coins, F.C.I. Press/Doubleday, New York, 1988.
Browning, A.W., The Early Quarter Dollars of the United
States, 1796-1838, Wayte Raymond, New York, 1925.
Taxay, Don, The U.S. Mint and Coinage, Arco Publishing
Co., New York, 1966.
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