1836-39 DOLLAR SILVER PATTERN
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 United States Mint
had ceased striking silver dollars in 1804. Although the denomination
was the "flagship" monetary unit in U.S. coinage, demand for
it came mostly from bullion depositors, and few dollar coins circulated
in the beginning of the 19th century. Much of each year's mintage was
either melted domestically or exported. By the 1820s and `30s however,
two successive Mint directors, Samuel Moore and Robert M. Patterson, had
advocated reviving dollar coinage. Although Moore obtained
authorization to do so in 1831, it was not until Patterson replaced him
in 1835 that preparations finally got under way.
Not since the 1792 half dimes were struck had so many Mint and
other government officials taken such a keen interest in the production
of a new coin. Mint Director Patterson, ambitious to make an artistic
statement, hired artist Thomas Sully to make sketches of a full figure
of Liberty along the lines of the allegorical figure Britannia seen on
English coins. Patterson retained noted painter Titian Peale to fashion
the eagle for the reverse and instructed newly hired Second Engraver
Christian Gobrecht to translate the designs to metal. Gobrecht's design
was a composite of both Peale's and Sully's works, as well as his own
ideas. It was a masterful work and received immediate acclaim. President
Jackson and his Cabinet reviewed Gobrecht's sketches on October 17,
1835 and were favorably impressed.
The final design featured the figure of Liberty seated on a
rock, draped in a loose-fitting gown suggesting statuary from
Hellenistic Greece. She is looking over her right shoulder, her right
arm supporting the Union shield. Her left arm holds a long pole with a
Liberty cap on top. The entire central device stands alone on the
obverse with no stars or lettered devices, only the date below, giving
the coin a medallic quality, with Liberty a solitary, cameo figure. A
naturalistic eagle in flight adorns the reverse, the bird rising "onward
and upward" as Patterson ordered, a position intended to symbolize
the unbounded optimism that Americans had for the nation's future. The
eagle flies amid a field of 26 large and small stars, representing the
thirteen original states and the thirteen admitted to the Union since
1789 (anticipating Michigan's entry).
By November 1836, all was ready for trial strikings in
silver. A small number (presumably 18 pieces) of the new dollars were
distributed in Philadelphia. Reaction was almost universally positive,
with one exception. Patterson had ordered Gobrecht to place his name on
the new coin. He did so by inscribing C. GOBRECHT F. in small letters in
the field beneath the figure of Liberty the F. standing for FECIT,
Latin for "He made it." Gobrecht was criticized as a "conceited
German" and vilified in the local press. Patterson solved the
problem by having Gobrecht move his name to the base of the figure of
Liberty, visible only if one looks carefully at the coin. The eighteen
or so pieces struck with his name below the base are considered
patterns and are very rare.
Regular production of Gobrecht dollars began sometime in
December of 1836. The 1,000 regular issue dollars of 1836 were struck
at the old 1792 standard fineness of .8924. The same date was used for
the 600 coins minted in March, 1837, but these pieces were produced from
planchets .900 fine as authorized by the Mint Act of 1837. So close in
weight, the two issues are easily differentiated by alignment: the 1837
dollars have a medallic alignment the obverse and reverse are aligned on
a vertical axis, while the 1836 coins have a horizontal, or coin,
alignment. All original dollars dated 1836 will show the eagle flying
"onward and upward," while the restrikes made in the 1850s and
`60s will have the eagle flying horizontally. The approximately 25
coins made in 1838 are considered to be patterns, with thirteen stars
around the periphery of the obverse replacing the stars on the reverse
fields. Only 300 dollars were struck in 1839 with Gobrecht's design, and
all were intended for circulation. These coins, like the 1838 patterns,
have reeded edges.
Throughout the 19th century Gobrecht dollars were very popular
with collectors. In the late 1850s, demand far exceeded the available
supply. Mint Director James Ross Snowden, desirous of expanding the
Mint's collection of coins during his tenure, decided to take advantage
of this situation. Funds were not available for outright purchase of
coins, so Snowden used Mint dies to create numismatic curiosities such
as the Class II and Class III 1804 dollars, "transitional"
half dimes and dimes, and Gobrecht dollar restrikes. He would then
trade these restrikes and fantasy coins to local collectors for rare
coins lacking in the Mint collection. These restrikes were made from
1858 through the summer of 1860 and again in 1867-68. Actual numbers
made are unknown, but it is estimated that the total number of restrikes
may exceed the original mintage.
All Gobrecht dollars were struck in the Philadelphia
Mint and all have a proof finish, even the regular circulation issues
of 1836 and 1837. This is a unique phenomenon in U.S. numismaticsthe
only series of coins intended for circulation struck as proofs.
Counterfeits are virtually unknown, perhaps because of the proof
surface, which is very difficult to duplicate. The design first begins
to show friction on Liberty's knees and breasts, and on the highpoint of
the eagle's breast on the reverse.
With the status of a regular issue coin, Gobrecht dollars are
actively pursued by type collectors. The most commonly encountered
issue is the plain edge 1836-dated restrike with name on base and starry
reverse. These restrikes comprise more than two-thirds of the Gobrecht
dollars offered at auction in recent years, and they exist in a wide
range of grades from heavily circulated to gem condition. Date
collectors occasionally attempt completion of a three-piece set of
coins with the dates 1836, 1838, and 1839, but very few collectors
undertake the challenge of a complete set of Gobrechts. Such a set
would be virtually impossible to assemble because of the several
obverse/reverse mulings made by Mint Director Snowden in the late
1850s.
Beginning in 1837, Gobrecht's Seated Liberty design was
adopted on all U.S. silver coins from half dime through dollar. The
reverse with its naturalistic eagle was dropped for the quarter, half
dollar, and dollar denominations in favor of a revision of John Reich's
heraldic eagle of 1807. The obverse designonly slightly modified from
Gobrecht's original conceptwas used on the dollar until 1873.
SPECIFICATIONS:
Diameter: 39 millimeters Weight: 1836 Original:
26.96 grams, Others: 26.73 grams Composition:1836 Orig.: .8924
silver, .1076 copper, Others: .900 silver, .100 copper Edge: 1836:
Plain, 1838-39: Reeded Net Weight: 1836 Orig.: .77351 ounce pure
silver, Others: .77344 ounce pure silver
BIBLIOGRAPHY:
Bowers, Q. David, Silver Dollars and Trade Dollars of the
United States, Bowers and Merena Galleries, Wolfeboro, NH, 1993.
Bowers, Q. David, The History of United States Coinage As
Illustrated by the Garrett Collection, Bowers and Merena Galleries,
Wolfeboro, NH, 1979.
Breen, Walter, Walter Breen's Complete Encylopedia of U.S.
and Colonial Coins, F.C.I./Doubleday, New York, 1988.
Julian, Robert. W., "The Gobrecht Dollars of
1836-1838," Legacy Magazine, November-December, 1988.
Pollock, Andrew W., United States Patterns and Related
Issues, Bowers and Merena Galleries, Wolfeboro, NH, 1994.
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