1873-74 QUARTER DOLLAR 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. The Mint Act of 1873,
later called by critics the "Crime of `73," started life as a
proposal by Treasury Secretary George S. Boutwell to move control of
the Mints to Washington and overhaul the existing coinage statutes.
Before it became law, however, it would encompass the opinions of over
thirty Treasury and Mint officials, undergo numerous revisions and fuel
intense debate in Congress for almost three years.
In the early 1870s, silver was once again in oversupply. Germany
and France had adopted the gold standard, dumping millions of dollars
worth of the metal on the market. At the same time, new discoveries of
silver in the western United States exacerbated the problem. Aside
from mine owners, silver had few friends. Foreigners didn't want their
U.S. bonds redeemed in the depreciating metal, and many believed that
the overabundance of silver would fuel inflation.
Boutwell's recommendations were included in a coinage
bill introduced in 1870 by Ohio Senator John Sherman, an advocate of
the gold-standard. Sherman had attended the Paris International Monetary
Conference in 1867, and he returned to the United States with the
notion that this country needed to adopt a gold standard based on the
metric system used by the Europeans. Such a standard would sharply
curtail use of silver, the metal that had been the mainstay of commerce
in this country. Curiously, although the provisions of Sherman's bill
were considered at length, few contemplated what effect they would have
on the economy of the United States. Sherman promoted his bill through
two sessions of the Senate until it was finally approved on January 10,
1871. It was sent to the House of Representatives the same day but
remained under consideration in that chamber for over a year, advocated
strongly by Massachusetts Representative Samuel Hooper and Chairman of
the House Committee on Coinage, Weights and Measures, Representative
Kelley. After the usual legislative paper shuffling, a beleaguered
Congress finally passed the bill on February 12, 1873, with an
effective date of April 1. The legislation demonetized silver,
eliminating the standard silver dollar, half dime and three-cent coin
(as well as the two-cent piece), but it created a Trade dollar for use
in the Orient. It also provided for a slight increase in the weight
standard of the quarter, dime and half dollar to conform with the "metric"
system. The Act produced no benefit for the commerce of the United
States yet greatly affected the use of money. It ended "free
coinage", the right of anyone to have foreign silver or bullion
coined into U.S. silver coins without charge. U.S. Bonds had to be
redeemed only in gold, as silver was no longer a monetary metal. The
net effect made the U.S. national debt doubly difficult to pay off.
However, it was of great benefit to the Europeans, especially the
English, who were large importers of American cotton and wheat.
Several years later, Missouri Senator Richard "Silver
Dick" Bland would declare that this "Crime of `73" "...was
a fraud...stealthily passed, without reconsideration and without
debate." Others claimed that it was ushered through Congress by
legislators in cahoots with agents of foreign governments. Although
Bland's accusations ignored the fact that the bill was discussed and
amended for several years, the other charges gained some credence in
1895 when a pamphlet published by the American Bimetallic Union
recounted the recollections of a prominent Colorado citizen, Frederick
A. Luckenbach. Luckenbach contended that a Mr. Ernst Seyd of London
came to America in the winter of 1872-3 with £100,000, representing
the interests of the Bank of England, which was determined to get a
bill demonetizing silver passed in the United States Congress. It turned
out that Mr. Seyd enjoyed a close personal relationship with
Representative Hooper, leading many to suspect that something
unorthodox had indeed occurred.
Although the reason is unclear, officials decided that
the new silver coins would bear a mark indicating the change of weight.
Since arrows at the date were used in 1853-55 for this purpose, they
were adopted again for the coinage of 1873. The weight change was
insignificant, as the new standard didn't exceed the allowable deviation
in weight proscribed by law. It made no difference if old or new
planchets were used, and it's likely that they were used
interchangeably. Though the previous coin issues remained current, many
business strikes and proofs were melted, including the obsolete
three-cent coins and half dimes. This action created rarities of many
silver issues of the early 1870s.
The arrows added to the existing Seated Liberty quarter
were just one of several cosmetic and technical changes this design had
undergone since it had been introduced by Christian Gobrecht in 1838.
The obverse depicts Miss Liberty seated on a rock, holding the Union
Shield and a pole topped with a Liberty cap. On the "Arrows"
coinage of 1873-74, the date below Miss Liberty is centered between
opposed arrowheads. On the reverse, an eagle with outstretched wings is
perched on an olive branch, clutching arrows and branches. Above the
eagle is the legend IN GOD WE TRUST, and surrounding the design is
UNITED STATES OF AMERICA and the denomination expressed as QUAR. DOL.
Mintmarks are found on the reverse, under the eagle. As with all Seated
Quarters, look for traces of wear on Liberty's hair, breast, knee and
arms. On the reverse, check the eagle's wing tips, neck and claws.
In its two-year run, slightly more than 2.3 million
Arrows quarters were minted for circulation, along with 1,240 proofs.
Though this coin is generally collected as a "type," a
complete set consists of just five coins: The Philadelphia (no mint
mark) and San Francisco (S) issues of 1873 and 1874 and the lone Carson
City (CC) issue of 1873. As a type coin, this design is part of the
overall Seated Liberty series, encompassing six major varieties: The
"No Drapery" design of 1838-40, the "No Motto" motif
from 1840 onward, the 1853 "Arrows and Rays," the 1854-55
"Arrows," the "With Motto variety from 1866 onward"
and the "1873-74 Arrows."
Arrows quarters of 1873-74 are easily obtainable in
circulated grades but become very elusive in AU or better. The key to
the series is the 1873-CC issue, which is extremely rare in mint state.
Next in scarcity is 1873-S. While the Philadelphia coins of both years
have the largest mintages, the date most often available in mint
condition is 1874-S. A hoard of 80 to 100 uncirculated pieces of this
date turned up on the West Coast around 1949 and was slowly dispersed
over the next twenty-five years.
The Seated Liberty Quarter With Arrows was the last
major design change to this long running series. In 1875, the arrows
were omitted. In 1892, the Seated Liberty Quarter design was replaced by
the new Charles Barber portrait of Liberty.
SPECIFICATIONS:
Diameter: 24.3 millimeters Weight: 6.25 grams Composition:
.900 silver, .100 copper Edge: Reeded Net Weight: .18084 ounce
pure silver
BIBLIOGRAPHY:
Breen, Walter, Walter Breen's Complete Encyclopedia of U.S.
and Colonial Coins, F.C.I. Doubleday, New York, 1988.
Briggs, Larry, The Comprehensive Encyclopedia of United
States Liberty Seated Quarters, Larry Briggs Rare Coins, Lima, OH,
1991.
Boosel, Harry X., The Silver Coinage of 1873 and the
So-Called Crime of 1873,
America's Silver Coinage, ANS, New York, 1986.
Taxay, Don, The U.S. Mint and Coinage, Arco Publishing
Co., New York, 1966.
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