1794-95 SILVER 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. The dollar was the
cornerstone of the monetary system devised by the Founding Fathers for
the fledgling United States. More than two years passed, however,
between the time Congress authorized dollar coinage and the actual
production of the first such coin, the Flowing Hair silver dollar.
Congress itself was responsible for the delay. As part
of the basic Mint Act of April 2, 1792, the House and Senate specified
that two key Mint officers, the chief coiner and assayer, would have to
post bonds of $10,000 each before they could work with precious metal.
The requirement was onerous: It represented more than six times the
annual salary of $1,500 apiece provided for these two officers.
Understandably, they had trouble meeting it and, until they did, only
copper coinage could proceed.
Frustrated by this roadblock in his efforts to begin full-scale
coinage, Mint Director David Rittenhouse appealed for help to Secretary
of State Thomas Jefferson, the Cabinet officer then in charge of the
Mint. Jefferson succeeded in getting Congress to lower the bonds to
$5,000 for Chief Coiner Henry Voigt and $1,000 for Assayer Albion Cox;
they then put up the money and the Mint was free at last to produce the
remaining denominations. By then it was March of 1794, and the red tape
had cost the Mint an entire production year of precious-metal coinage:
The only coins issued in 1793 had been copper cents and half cents.
(Although the Mint was established in 1792 and it struck some coins that
year, all are viewed as patterns rather than official federal issues.)
Silver coinage started in 1794 with two denominations the dollar and
half dollar; both were identical in design (half dimes of this date were
coined the following year). The dollar was deemed the most
prestigious, so Mint officials decided to strike that first. Actually,
the Mint had gotten a running start on the new coins: Engraver Robert
Scot had been told to prepare designs for them months before the legal
snarl was untangled.
Congress had specified that the new coins should bear a
design "emblematic of Liberty," and Scot accomplished this
with a right-facing portrait of a youthful female figure whose hair
flowed freely behind her hence the descriptive term
"Flowing Hair." The word LIBERTY appears above her, with the
date below and 15 stars along the sides, symbolizing the number of
states in the Union at that time. Scot is said to have meant the flowing
hair to signify freedom. A pattern 25-cent piece of 1792 served as
Scot's model for the obverse; this had been designed by Joseph Wright,
who died of yellow fever in 1793 after serving briefly as Mint
engraver. The dollar's reverse depicts a small, spread-winged eagle
perched upon a rock and surrounded by laurel branches. Encircling this,
along the border, is the motto UNITED STATES OF AMERICA. The dollar's
"third side," the edge, carries the inscription HUNDRED CENTS
ONE DOLLAR OR UNIT, with decorations separating the words.
The Flowing Hair dollar is slightly larger and heavier
than later U.S. cartwheels like the Morgan and Peace dollars. Its
authorized fineness differs, too, but its actual fineness doesn't,
because of some curious doings at the Mint. Congress had specified a
peculiar alloy of 1485/1664 silver and 179/1664 copper, for a fineness
of .8924+. But Assayer Cox complained that this was too difficult to
achieve and, what's more, that silver coins would turn black in ordinary
use unless they were at least .900 fine. He prevailed on Rittenhouse to
let him use that higher standard, even though Congress hadn't sanctioned
it, creating an incredible situation where the Mint was actually
breaking the law of the land. This led to substantial losses for people
who deposited silver bullion with the Mint and took silver dollars in
return, for they were being forced to furnish more silver per coin than
the law required. Eventually, some sought and obtained reimbursement.
It's believed that the Mint struck a total of 2,000 silver dollars in
1794, all from a single pair of dies. Evidently, some were rejected as
being excessively weak and may have ended up being used as coin blanks
the following year or simply being melted. The accepted net mintage is
1,758, with estimates of about 120-130 survivors, in all grades. The
entire production occurred on a single day, October 15, and Voight
stored many of the coins in the Mint's vaults, giving them to
Rittenhouse the following May. The Director presented a few of the
dollars to VIPs as souvenirs and also made a point of spending some (or
exchanging them for Spanish dollars) in order to get the coins before
the public. Rittenhouse never distributed all the coins, however,
resigning due to failing health in June of 1795. This set the stage for
a very interesting piece of numismatic history,
Almost 170 years later, in 1964, a small box of "strange"
coins was consigned to a Christies auction in London by the family of
British nobleman Major Sir Roland Denys Guy Winn, M.C., Fourth Baron St.
Oswald. The box contained about $10 in face value of new U.S. coins,
dated either 1794 or 1795. Most notable of these pieces were two
uncirculated 1794 dollars which brought $11,400 each at the sale. When
the coins returned to the United States, the excitement generated among
American collectors began to take on a life of its own. A story took
root that had one of Lord St. Oswald's ancestors traveling to
Philadelphia in 1795 and receiving the coins directly from Henry
DeSaussure, Rittenhouse's successor as Mint Director. While this
account makes fascinating reading and has been accepted as fact for over
thirty years, recent research has uncovered that it's based entirely on
conjecture. No family records or accounts support the proposition of a
trip to the United States by a St. Oswald ancestor; in fact, they tend
to refute it. We don't know for certain how the coins were obtained or
by whomonly that they were in the St. Oswald family's possession in
1964.
Perhaps a future numismatic researcher will be able to unravel
this mystery.Further dollar production was suspended until a new press
capable of imparting fuller, stronger strikes could be installed. It
didn't resume until early May of 1795, and from then through
mid-October the new equipment cranked out more than 160,000 Flowing Hair
dollars dated 1795. In October, the design gave way to a new Draped
Bust dollar, making the Flowing Hair dollar a two-year type coin.
Despite its brevity, the Flowing Hair dollar series is
widely collected by type (most collectors selecting the 1795 issue,
because it is so much more plentiful than 1794). Some of the 1795
dollars have two leaves below each wing of the eagle, while others have
three. Both kinds are equally available, however. There are no records
of proofs for either year, but some 1795 dollars are purported to be
"specimen" strikes. Mint state pieces of both dates are very
rare. Points to first show wear are the cheek, shoulder and hair above
Liberty's forehead and the eagle's breast, head and wing-tops.
Flowing Hair dollars are coveted collectibles, not only
because of their great rarity but also because they possess such a
powerful link with the birth of both the nation and U.S. coinage. Silver
dollars are enormously popular, so this short, small series truly was
the start of something big.
SPECIFICATIONS:
Diameter: 39-40 millimeters Weight: 26.96 grams Composition:
.8924 silver, .1076 copper Edge: Lettered Net Weight: .77344
ounce pure silver
BIBLIOGRAPHY:
Bowers, Q. David, Silver Dollars & Trade Dollars of the
United States, A Complete Encyclopedia, Bowers and Merena
Galleries, Wolfeboro, NH, 1993.
Breen, Walter, Walter Breen's Complete Encyclopedia of U.S.
and Colonial Coins, F.C.I. Press/Doubleday, New York, 1988.
Hodder, Michael J., "Who was Major the Lord St.
Oswald?," The Asylum, Fall, 1994.
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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