1794-95 HALF DOLLAR FLOWING HAIR LIBERTY 
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 recent years, the half
dollar has all but disappeared from the channels of U.S. commerce,
becoming almost irrelevant to the nation's coinage system. That's a far
cry from the role it played in America's formative years, when it had a
significant function and carried exceptional weight. Its importance was
underscored by the fact that in 1794, when U.S. silver coinage began,
the half dollar was one of the first three denominations to be issued
in that metal, along with the silver dollar and half dime.
Coinage in general was slow to get under way at the nation's
first mint in Philadelphia. Congress passed the law authorizing the
U.S. Mint and spelling out coin denominations and specifications on
April 2, 1792but the first copper coins didn't go into production until
1793, and more than two full years went by before the first silver coins
emerged.
Part of the delay resulted from complications inherent
in setting up a new mint. But, to a great extent, precious metal coinage
was stymied by red tape of the government's own devising. In
establishing the Mint, Congress had decreed that two key technical
officersthe chief coiner and assayerwould have to post bonds of $10,000
apiece before they could work with gold and silver. The intent of this
was laudable: to protect the American people from malfeasance. The
effect, however, was crippling: The designated officers couldn't come
up with the money, an enormous sum by 18th-century standards, so only
copper coinage could proceed. Congress relented at length, lowering
the bonds to more manageable levels, but only after Mint Director David
Rittenhouse secured the intervention of Secretary of State Thomas
Jefferson, the Cabinet officer then in charge of the Mint. Chief Coiner
Henry Voigt and Assayer Albion Cox thereupon posted their bonds of
$5,000 and $1,000, respectively, and precious-metal coinage got under
way.
The dollar was the first silver coin to be produced;
being the largest and having the highest face value, it was looked upon
as possessing the most prestigesomething the infant nation sorely
needed. But while the silver dollar may have burnished America's image,
it did little to provide an immediate solution to the nation's coinage
needs: The coining press couldn't cope with its size and heft and broke
down after fewer than 1,800 satisfactory pieces had been struck.
Rittenhouse decided to suspend dollar coinage until a better
press could be installed, a delay that would prove to be more than six
months long. Meanwhile, however, pressure built from depositors who had
left silver bullion with the government, expecting silver coinage in
return. To meet this demand, the Mint began producing half dollars,
delivering the first shipment of approximately 5,300 pieces on Dec. 1,
1794. Thus did the two largest U.S. silver coins assume at the very
outset the relative roles they would play for over a century: the
dollar as a showpiece and the half dollar as a workhorse.
While their roles may have been different, the 1794 dollar and
half dollarand, for that matter, the first half dime as wellwere
identical in design. Congress had specified that the silver coins should
carry a design "emblematic of Liberty," and Mint engraver
Robert Scot had implemented this mandate with a right-facing portrait
of a youthful female figure whose hair flowed freely behind herhence
the descriptive term "Flowing Hair." It's said the flowing
hair was meant to signify freedom. LIBERTY appears above the portrait,
with the date below and 15 stars along the sides, denoting the number of
states in the Union at that time. Scot's model for the obverse was a
pattern 25 cent piece of 1792 designed by Joseph Wright, a Mint engraver
who died of yellow fever in 1793. The coins' reverse depicts a small,
spread-winged eagle perched upon a rock and surrounded by laurel
branches. Along the border, encircling this, is the motto UNITED STATES
OF AMERICA. The half dollar's edge bears the inscription FIFTY CENTS OR
HALF A DOLLAR, with decorations between the words.
After completing the first production run of Flowing Hair half
dollars, the Mint was poised to make more. But its rolling equipment
broke down, so it couldn't flatten ingots to the proper thickness for
coin blanks. Repairs took several weeks, and as 1794 drew to a close
the Mint had at least six obverse dies on hand with that date. Rather
than scrap them, it kept making 1794 half dollars in 1795. Only when
all the 1794 dies became unusable did it start using dies dated 1795.
The Mint produced 23,464 half dollars dated 1794 and 299,680
dated 1795. It replaced the obverse in 1796 with the Draped Bust
portrait of Liberty, making the Flowing Hair version a two-year type
coin. Some 1795 half dollars have a recut date, but these are not
unduly elusive. Some 1795 pieces have three leaves under each of the
eagle's wings, instead of the normal two, and these are scarce. No
proofs are known for this series, which is widely collected by type.
Points to check for wear are the hair above and beside Liberty's
forehead and the center of the eagle's breast.
Flowing Hair half dollars are slightly larger and heavier than
their modern counterparts. Their authorized fineness is marginally
lower, but their actual fineness is virtually the sameand thereby hangs
a tale. Congress had specified an unusual alloy of 1485/1664 silver and
179/1664 copper, for a fineness of .8924+. But Assayer Cox complained
that this was unworkable, and made the bizarre claim that silver coins
would blacken in ordinary use unless they were at least .900 fine. He
induced Director Rittenhouse to let him use the higher standard, even
though Congress hadn't sanctioned itmeaning the Mint was breaking the
law of the land. This led to substantial losses for people who deposited
bullion with the Mint and took silver coins in return, for they had to
give more silver per coin than the law required.
Apparently, most Flowing Hair half dollars went right into
commercial use. While readily available in circulated condition, they
are virtually unobtainable in high Mint-State grades.
SPECIFICATIONS:
Diameter: approximately 32.5 millimeters Weight:
13.48 grams Composition: .8924 silver, .1076 copper Edge:
Lettered Net Weight: .38672 ounce pure silver
BIBLIOGRAPHY:
Breen, Walter, Walter Breen's Complete Encyclopedia of U.S.
and Colonial Coins, F.C.I. Press/Doubleday, New York, 1988.
Overton, Al C., Early Half Dollar Die Varieties 1794-1836,
Third Edition, edited by Donald Parsley, Escondido, CA, 1990.
Taxay, Don, The U.S. Mint and Coinage, Arco Publishing
Co., New York, 1966.
Yeoman, R.S., A Guide Book of United States Coins, 47th
Edition, Western Publishing Co., Racine, WI, 1993.
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