1840-57 HALF CENT CORONET HEAD LIBERTY BRAIDED HAIR 
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 gold and silver
still took center stage in the 18th and 19th century monetary world,
copper coins were dear to the colonial experience. Since well before
the American Revolution, small coppers minted by official and unofficial
sources circulated virtually everywhere in the Thirteen Colonies. The
large number and variety of colonial coppers attest to how needed these
coins were for common everyday transactions. When the United States Mint
was established, the first regular issue coins minted were the copper
cent and half cent.
When the Mint began making copper coins in 1793, they
were still competing with private coin issuers. Mint record show that
1,076 lbs. of Talbot, Allum & Lee 1795 cent tokens (about 52,000
tokens) were purchased in April of 1795 and were cut down to make half
cents. As more coins became available for the stream of commerce, the
lowly half cent ceased to have meaning as a medium of exchange. The
coins of choice were the vast numbers of Spanish reales that circulated
freely in the pre-Civil War United States.
Half cents were minted only sporadically after 1811. An
order from the merchant Washington Cilley was responsible for
reestablishing production of the coin in 1831, though that year's
mintage was very small, about 2,200 pieces. Production peaked in 1835
but ceased the following year, after lack of orders for the denomination
caused Mint Director Robert M. Patterson to wait until the large
quantity stored in Mint vaults could be distributed. It was the custom
in this era to give visiting dignitaries gifts of proof sets of United
States coins. In 1840, Patterson decided to include the half cent in the
proof sets and instructed Mint engraver Christian Gobrecht to create
dies for this purpose. He also directed him to complete hubs from which
working dies could be made in case the need for half cents returned.
Gobrecht used the same Braided Hair design he had used on his cent of
1839. The new Miss Liberty replaced John Reich's matronly "Classic
Head " used from 1809 to 1829 and again, with some modifications
by William Kneass, from 1831 through 1836. The Gobrecht Braided Hair is
a simple design that gives dignity to this lowest coin denomination. A
bust of Liberty, her hair braided into a bun in the back of her head,
ringlets of hair draping down below the base of the bust, faces left.
She is wearing a tiara in which the word LIBERTY is inscribed. Thirteen
stars surround her head in a semicircle. The reverse continued the
design introduced on John Reich's half cent of 1809 and used with minor
changes throughout the history of this coin. The denomination HALF CENT
is framed in a wreath tied at the bottom with a bow, surrounded by the
legend UNITED STATES OF AMERICA.
Braided Hair half cents of 1840 to 1849 were made only
as proofs and were used for diplomatic presentation sets or sold to
well-connected collectors. Orders for business strikes numbered only
about 16,000 pieces per year, and the Mint met demand from stocks on
hand. As late as 1848 there were still 82,000 half cents remaining in
the Mint's vaults from the 1834 and 1835 mintages. In 1849, with
supplies dwindling, small orders for half cents were received by the
Mint, and production of the coin began again. The orders were probably
stimulated by the growing shortage of silver coins that were being
withdrawn from circulation due to the rising price of silver. Except for
a hiatus in production in 1852, when sufficient quantities of the coin
were again on hand, minting continued until 1857 when the denomination
was finally discontinued. After 1850, most production went to Post
Offices where they were used for making change. Collecting coins
became a popular hobby in the 1850s, and it became irresistible to some
mint employees to get out the old dies and "restrike" the
proof issues for the growing army of paying collectors. These were sold
surreptitiously by Theodore Eckfeldt, the Mint's night watchman,
through a Philadelphia store owned by a Dr. M. W. Dickeson and later
through coin dealer William Idler. Mint Director James Ross Snowden
discovered this scam and sealed the dies away in the mint vault in July
of 1860. Eight years later, the then Mint Director Henry R. Linderman
opened the cartons and struck some additional pieces before finally
destroying the dies.
There were ten years of proofs before business strikes
even began. This is unique in the history of United States coinage,
making this an interesting but expensive area to collect. Although
scarce, nearly all the proof dates appear in the numismatic marketplace
at one time or another, though some varieties are extremely rare. "Restrikes"
are easy to identify. The originals have large berries in the wreath,
and the restrikes have small berries. Though the exact mintage is
impossible to determine, it has been estimated by various sources that
there were fewer than fifteen hundred proofs minted in all years,
including the proofs and restrikes of 1852.
The business strikes present another kind of collecting
challenge. Only 544,510 coins were minted. Although every date is
available in uncirculated and circulated grades, finding original red
mint state pieces is difficult. "Hoard" dates such as those
of 1851, 1854, 1855, and 1857 appear occasionally, but most seem to
suffer from the black spotting that detracts from the eye-appeal of
copper coins. Brown or red-brown uncirculated coins are more commonly
found. Beware of coins dipped in cyanide to simulate pristine coins.
When grading Braided Hair half cents note that mint
state coins usually have some blemishes. Copper is a chemically active
metal and, depending on the storage environment, can suffer from carbon
spots and corrosion marks. These imperfections must be considered when
grading. Look for wear spots first on Liberty's hair just to the right
of her ear and on the hair curls on the lower part of her neck and
below the bust. On the reverse, check for traces of wear on the laurel
wreath at nine o'clock and three o'clock and on the bow.
The half cent as a denomination died in 1857 but was
almost revived by Congress in 1912. Ohio Representa- tive Bulkley, on
the advice of Treasury Secretary Franklin MacVeagh, introduced a bill
that would have created a new half cent and three cent piece. It
passed the House on May 6, 1912 but never passed the Senate, ending
forever the half cent denomination.
SPECIFICATIONS:
Diameter: 23 millimeters Weight: 5.44 grams Composition:
Copper Edge: Plain
BIBLIOGRAPHY:
Breen, Walter, Walter Breen's Complete Encyclopedia of U.S.
and Colonial Coins, F.C.I. Doubleday, New York, 1988.
Breen, Walter, Walter Breen's Encyclopedia of United States
Half Cents 1793-1857, American Institute of Numismatic Research,
South Gate, CA, 1983.
Cohen, Roger S. Jr., American Half Cents, the "Little
Half Sisters", 2nd Edition, Wigglesworth & Ghatt,
Arlington, VA, 1982.
Garraty, John, The Columbia History of the World,
Harper & Row, New York, 1972.
Taxay, Don, The U.S. Mint and Coinage, Sanford J. Durst,
New York, 1983.
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