1932- QUARTER DOLLAR GEORGE WASHINGTON 
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. The dark shadow of
Depression fell across the U.S. in 1931, giving Americans little to
celebrate. Soup kitchens, massive unemployment and the Dust Bowl all
took their toll on the public's spirit. But the following year was the
200th anniversary of George Washington's birth, and officials in our
nation's capital were ready to mark the occasion. The Treasury
Department had proposed that a half dollar be struck to honor the birth
of the nation's founding father. Enlisting the cooperation of the
Commission of Fine Arts and the Washington Bicentennial Commission,
they went ahead with plans for a design competition.
Rules announced early in the year called for entries
modeled after the "celebrated bust" of Washington by noted
French sculptor Jean Antoine Houdon. The bust, created from a life-mask
taken at Mount Vernon in 1785, was uncannily accurate and nationally
admired. Ninety-eight entrants fashioned some 100 designs: Most were
amateurish, some were good, but one was exceptional, at least in the
Commission's opinion. It was submitted by Laura Gardin Fraser, designer
of the Oregon Trail commemorative and wife of James Earle Fraser, who
created the Buffalo nickel. Mrs. Fraser's powerful, medallic design was
far superior to the competition and reminiscent of the artistic works
produced during the numismatically "golden years" inspired by
Theodore Roosevelt. The Commission's decision was unanimous.
Unfortunately, there were other people to please.
Initially, Congress got into the act. Since changing the
design of the half dollar required their approval, once asked, they
instead decided to change the quarter, thereby signaling an end to the
acclaimed Standing Liberty design issued since 1916. No one argued with
the denomination change, but a real problem was to arise with the man
lawfully responsible for coinage designs, Treasury Secretary Andrew
Mellon.
Mellon had his own views about art. Rich beyond
imagination, he had amassed one of the world's foremost art collections,
along with a reputation for stubbornness which was only exacerbated by
his wealth and position. Some would later attribute it to Mellon's
chauvinism, but he repeatedly refused to listen to the Commission's
pleas for Fraser's design. Instead he chose one by John Flanagan, a
medalist whose earlier works evoked his studies under Augustus
Saint-Gaudens, but whose Washington design was an icon of the bland,
conservative and frozen images that proliferated (especially in
government sculpture) during the Depression. At first, Mellon placated
the Commission, calling for a second contest. But ultimately, he chose
the Flanagan design. While still fielding protests from the advisory
panel, he left office to become Herbert Hoover's ambassador to Great
Britain. His successor, Ogden Mills, would consider the matter no
further. He brusquely reminded the Commissioners that they had a purely
advisory role, and the final decision fell upon the Treasury Secretary,
not the Commission.
Flanagan's design was simple but more appropriate to a
portrait than medallic art, with exceptionally low relief. Washington
faces left and dominates the obverse, with the date below and LIBERTY
above. The motto IN GOD WE TRUST is in the left field, with the
designer's initials on the base of the neck. A spread-winged heraldic
eagle adorns the reverse, encircled by UNITED STATES OF AMERICA and E
PLURIBUS UNUM above, and QUARTER DOLLAR and a wreath below. Mintmarks
are found below the wreath on coins dated 1964 and earlier, and just to
the right of Washington's ribbon on issues beginning in 1968.
From a production viewpoint, Mint officials must have
loved the design. With such low relief, coins could be rapidly struck
with only one blow from the press. The drawback, however, was not only
an artistic loss, but the weak design elements required periodic
alterations to the master hub. The motto was so weakly defined in 1932
and on some issues of 1934 that it could barely be read, even on
uncirculated coins.
There have only been two significant changes in the
series since its inception in 1932. In 1965, the composition was changed
from 90% silver to a clad or "sandwich metal" of 75% copper
and 25% nickel, bonded to a pure copper core. The second modification
came in 1975, when Jack Ahr's Bicentennial "Drummer Boy"
design appeared on the reverse, with the dual-date 1776-1976 on the
obverse. In 1977, the regular design returned.
Continually gaining in popularity with collectors,
Washington quarters are usually assembled by date and mint. Coins were
issued every year except 1933, and the only break in the series
recognized by collectors is 1964, the final year of silver coin
production. Although not rare, the low-mintage 1932-D and S quarters
are considered scarce issues, along with mint-state 1936 Denver coins
which, despite their large mintage, somehow escaped the hoarder's nets.
Fortunately for today's collectors, the renowned dealer Wayte Raymond
and others were quite diligent in their accumulation of bank-wrapped
rolls in the `30s, a time when most people couldn't even afford the $10
cost of a single roll. Many Americans didn't have a job, and most who
did, like the decimated ranks of Detroit auto-workers, only made about
$20 a week.
Since 1932, over 21 billion business strikes and 60
million proofs have been issued, an awesome quantity by any standards.
Production took place in four mints: Philadelphia, Denver, San Francisco
and West Point. Although collectors are focusing more attention lately
on the business strikes, proofs have always been favorites, particularly
the 1936-1942 issues and the scarce cameo-proof coins of 1950 to 1964.
In recent years, the numismatic community has learned of a unique oddity
in the series, a 1970-S proof Washington struck over a 1900 Barber
quarter. Apparently the concoction of a creative mint employee, the
piece somehow escaped into a 1970-S proof set, no doubt initially
baffling its discoverer.
Washington quarters are collected in all grade ranges
and are especially popular in XF, AU and mint state. With so many coins
struck from so many dies, die-varieties, over-mintmarks and hubbing
errors abound, making the series a fertile field of study for those
delving into the intricacies of modern coinage production. Wear on the
design will first show on Washington's hair at the ear and on the
center of the eagle's breast. Struck counterfeits exist, but collectors
are more likely to encounter altered mintmarks, especially on 1932-D
and 1932-S issues. Authentication of any questionable specimens is
highly recommended.
SPECIFICATIONS:
Diameter: 24.3 millimeters Weight: 1932-1964: 6.25
grams
1965 to date: 5.67 grams Composition: 1932-1964: .900 silver,
.100 copper 1965 to date: .750 copper, .250 nickel bonded to a
pure copper core
Edge: Reeded Net Weight: 1932-1964: .18084 ounce pure silver
BIBLIOGRAPHY:
Boorstin, Daniel J., et. al., We Americans, The
National Geographic Society, Washington, DC, 1975.
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.
Tomaska, Rick Jerry, Cameo and Brilliant Proof Coinage of
the 1950 to 1970 Era, R &I Publications, Encinitas, CA, 1991.
Taxay, Don, The U.S. Mint and Coinage, Arco Publishing
Co., New York, 1966.
Vermeule, Cornelius, Numismatic Art in America, The
Belknap Press of Harvard University Press, Cambridge, MA, 1971.
Feigenbaum, John, The Complete Guide to Washington Quarters,
DLRC Press, Virginia Beach, VA, 1994.
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