1892-1916 QUARTER DOLLAR BARBER LIBERTY HEAD 
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 the last decade of the
19th century the United States was in the throes of transition. Economic
depression raged. Unionism was defining its relationship both to
management and to its own membership. Industrialist J.P. Morgan, labor
advocate Samuel Gompers and Congressman William Jennings Bryan were
familiar names. The 1893 Chicago World's Columbian Exposition unveiled
the technical achievements of capitalism as well as America's cultural
sophistication. Piano player Scott Joplin introduced a new kind of
music: Ragtime. It was against this backdrop of names and events that
the coinage of Charles E. Barber was introduced to the American public.
Coins are usually referred to by their design, not their
designer. The Mercury dime, the Franklin half dollar, the Walking
Liberty half dollar, the Lincoln cent and almost all other coins give
no clues, except for initials hidden somewhere on the coin, to the
designer's identity. So when new collectors hear about "Barber
Coinage" for the first time, they must think these coins have
something to do with haircuts or barber poles. Only four U.S. coin
designs are known solely by their designer's names. Christian Gobrecht
and George T. Morgan are famous for their beautiful dollars. Augustus
Saint-Gaudens, the famous sculptor, designed the magnificent 20th
Century twenty dollar gold coin. Charles Barber, however, achieved equal
notoriety due more to the controversies of his office than for the
beauty of his designs.
Charles Edward Barber was the latest generation in a
family of engravers. Born in London in 1840, he came to the United
States with his father in 1852. His father William worked as an
engraver for private businesses in New England until, in 1869, he was
appointed Chief Engraver of the United States Mint. Charles accompanied
him and became an assistant engraver at the mint in Philadelphia. When
William Barber passed away in 1879, President Rutherford B. Hayes
appointed Charles to the position of Chief Engraver.
In 1887, Mint Director James P. Kimball noted in his
annual report that in his opinion, the coinage of the United States was
out of date and should be changed. At his request, Senator Justin S.
Morill introduced a bill authorizing the Treasury Department to redesign
coins without the necessity of first obtaining Congressional approval,
as long as the design had been in use for twenty-five or more years.
The Seated Liberty dime, quarter and half dollar had remained virtually
unchanged since 1837. So when the bill passed on September 26, 1890,
these coins were first to be earmarked for change.
The Treasury Department, against the advice of Charles
Barber, organized a competition to produce the new designs. Barber,
Augustus Saint Gaudens and engraver Henry Mitchell were chosen to judge
the contest. The result was disastrous, mostly because the judges
believed themselves to be better designers than the contestants. In the
end, Charles Barber got what he had wanted all along. With the support
of the new Mint Director Edward O. Leech, he was chosen to do the design
work.
The Barber Quarter, as adopted in 1892, shows a bust of
Liberty similar in style to the Morgan Dollar but facing right. She is
wearing a Liberty cap with a laurel wreath, and a ribbon ties her hair
in the back of her neck. IN GOD WE TRUST appears above her head, and
the date appears below. Six stars on the left and seven stars on the
right represent the original thirteen colonies. The reverse imitates
the Great Seal of the United States and depicts an eagle with
outstretched wings, holding an olive branch with thirteen leaves in its
right claw and a sheaf of 13 arrows in its left. There is a ribbon with
the motto E PLURIBUS UNUM being held in the eagle's beak and thirteen
stars are in the field. The designers initial (B) is at the base of
Liberty's neck.
When the first Barber quarters were struck in January of
1892, it was discovered that the coins wouldn't stack properly. This
problem was resolved by altering the relief and design elements. Thus,
there are two types of 1892 quarters. The easiest way to identify them
is by the reverse. On Type I, the eagle's left wing crosses the letter
"E", in UNITED below the middle serif, leaving most of the
letter exposed. The Type II eagle's wing covers most of the letter
"E" and the middle serif is hidden. There is a third type,
introduced during 1900, with the eagle's wing extending beyond the top
of the "E."
The series has no major rarities, though 1901-S is a
challenge even in low grades. There are two other "keys";
1896-S the 1913-S, but even these are obtainable at a price. Almost 265
million pieces were minted between 1892 and 1916 in Philadelphia (no
mintmark), San Francisco (S), and New Orleans (O). The mintmark can be
found below the eagle's tail. Proofs were minted every year except 1916
and totaled more than 17,000. "Type" collectors particularly
favor the 1892 date as it was the first year of issue, and 1909-O, as it
was the last issue from the New Orleans Mint.
On high grade Barber quarters, look carefully for slide
marks and light scratches, especially on the face. This coin was often
collected in albums that used plastic slides. Check for traces of wear
on Liberty's cheek, forehead and the hair above her eye. Also check
carefully for wear on the "puff" of the Liberty cap. On the
reverse, the eagle's wing tips, head and tail are the points to first
show wear.
Barber's coinage coincided with an innovation in
manufacturing master hubs. Large cameo models were made out of wax and a
resinous gum, then electroplated. The model was placed in a
pantograph or transfer lathe that transferred the design to a
master hub of the size needed for a coin die. The new technique allowed
for greater precision and allowed the artist easy introduction of more
design elements. Of course, one of the criticisms of the Barber quarter
was that the design was cluttered.
In 1916, a new contest was held to replace the Barber
quarter design which had been in production the required minimum of 25
years. This contest was successful, and a new design by Hermon Atkins
MacNeil, the Standing Liberty quarter, went into production in December
of that year. With their low relief design, Barber quarters continued to
circulate well into the 1950's, still retaining their dates, outlasting
the more "artistic" but less practical Standing Liberty
quarter.
SPECIFICATIONS:
Diameter: 24.3 millimeters Weight: 6.25 grams Composition:
.900 silver, .100 copper Edge: Reeded Net Weight: .18084 oz
pure silver
BIBLIOGRAPHY:
Breen, Walter, Walter Breen's Complete Encyclopedia of U.S.
and Colonial Coins, F.C.I. Doubleday, New York, 1988.
Brown & Dunn, A Guide To the Grading of United States
Coins, 7th Edition, General Distributors, 1980.
Lawrence, David, The Complete Guide To Barber Quarters,
2nd Edition, DLRC Press, Virginia Beach, VA, 1994.
Smith, Page, The Rise of Industrial America Volume 6,
Penguin Books, 1990.
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