1840-66 SILVER DOLLAR SEATED LIBERTY WITHOUT MOTTO 
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 year was 1840. Martin
Van Buren was completing a Presidential term blighted by terrible
economic depression. This era, called the Hard Times, resulted from
years of reckless Western land speculation and the growth of unregulated
banks issuing a flood of unsecured paper money. The prolonged
depression ravaged America's agriculture and industry and saw hundreds
of thousands starving and unemployed.
Inherited from President Andrew Jackson was the Van
Buren Administration's faith in "hard money" silver and gold
as the only reliable store of value in contrast to shaky credit and
worthless paper money. Expressing this hard money outlook, the Mint
strove from 1836 to 1840 to create a new circulating silver dollar. No
dollar coin had appeared for circulation since 1804, when the last of
the 1803-dated Draped Bust dollars were released.
Mint Director Robert Maskell Patterson viewed the new
dollar as the pinnacle of America's silver coinage. After all, it was a
fortunate workman who made even four dollars for a work week of 76 to 80
hours of unremitting toil in this harsh era. A silver dollar was indeed
a store of wealth to millions of impoverished working-class Americans.
An admirer of the seated Britannia on British copper
coinage, Patterson believed that a seated female figure would be just as
"emblematic of liberty" as the heads and busts adorning the
nation's coinage. He engaged the great portrait painter Thomas Sully to
make sketches for his seated Liberty. Sully perched her on a rock in
Grecian robes, left arm supporting a Union shield with a scroll
inscribed LIBERTY. Her right arm was raised and held a pole topped with
a small Liberty Cap. The Mint's assistant engraver, Christian Gobrecht,
adapted the Sully sketches to bas-relief art suitable for coinage. The
result was the Seated Liberty design used at one time or another on
half dimes, dimes, 20-cent pieces, quarters, half dollars and dollars
from 1836 through 1891.
As reworked by Gobrecht and Robert Ball Hughes, Liberty
emerged with a rounded head and her dangling right arm appearing
immensely long, her left markedly shorter. Pattern obverses of 1836 and
1839 showed no obverse stars but placed the artist's signature in the
field or on the base. Gobrecht's original reverses of 1836-1839
presented a magnificent flying eagle in a starry or plain sky.
Unfortunately, the "No Motto" silver dollar of 1840-1865
deleted the innovative flying eagle, substituting the unimaginative but
familiar "sandwich board" bird with dropped wings and a shield
on its breast. Liberty had no artist's signature and sat demurely in a
circle of 13 stars with the date placed below. The coins of 1840-65 do
not have the motto IN GOD WE TRUST on the reverse.
Mintages were generally small by modern standards, totaling only
2,895,673 coins for the series. The Philadelphia Mint (no mintmark)
struck all dates from 1840 to 1865 inclusive; New Orleans (O), struck
dollars dated 1846, 1850, 1859 and 1860; the San Francisco Mint (S),
struck this type dollar only in 1859. Mintmarks are located under the
olive branch, between the eagle's feet on the reverse.
Tiny numbers of proofs were struck of most early
Philadelphia dates, but they are of great rarity. Numbers struck are not
known with certainty and are omitted from popular guide books. Proofs
were first made for public sale in 1858 when perhaps 80 pieces were
struck; later proof mintages never exceeded 1,000 except for 1860, when
1,330 pieces were coined. Proof restrikes were made of the 1851 and
1852 coins. The last No Motto date was 1865, with 46,500 business
strikes and 500 proofs made. Two 1866-dated No Motto coins are known,
but these "fantasy pieces" were made somewhat later for sale
to wealthy collectors. In recent years, the existence of a single proof
1851-O specimen has come to light, although researchers postulate that
this was accidentally made by the Philadelphia "Midnight Minters,"
(probably engraver George Eckfeldt and his son, Mint night watchman
Theodore) who in their haste to clandestinely remanufacture the coveted
1851 issue, inadvertently used an 1859 reverse die awaiting shipment
to New Orleans.
Seated dollars never circulated to any great extent in
the East, although numbers were in daily use west of the Mississippi.
The Civil War further restricted their circulation as the numbers of
business strikes and proofs struck contracted sharply. Bullion buyers
snapped up most new silver coins for export as fast as they were made.
These coins were shipped overseas for melting and the only U.S. Mint
product most citizens saw were the new bronze cents. Coin collectors
derided the Mint as "Uncle Sam's copperhead factory."
These large silver coins had some odd striking
characteristics. The actual position of Liberty's head may cause poor
detail even on pristine specimens. The feathers on the eagle's leg and
the claws may also show evidence of weak strike. Wear first appears on
Liberty's thigh, right breast and the top of her head. The tops of the
eagle's wings follow. Because of their size and weight, uncirculated
coins stored in Mint bags will show scattered contact marks. Proofs
often are hairlined from the careless handling of early non-numismatic
owners or will show evidence of cleaning by old-time collectors. Seated
Liberty dollars have gained in popularity with the entire collector
community since the 1970's, when the great U.S. Treasury hoard of
silver dollars was liquidated, although few of the design were found. To
collectors more familiar with Morgan and Peace dollars issued in the
tens of millions, these earlier coins may seem scarce and elusive, and
indeed they are. Only a small minority of all Seated Liberty dollars
struck remain in existence today. Researcher Weimar W. White estimated
that only a fraction surviveeven in low grade.
Assembling a complete date and mint set in lower
circulated grades is within reason, given patience and perseverance. An
entire set in mint-state will be costly, especially for examples of the
1850-O, 1851, 1852, and 1859-S. A complete run of proofs is a
theoretically possible goal but one which will be unrealistic for any
but the best-financed collector.
The Seated Liberty series continued from 1866 to 1873
with the reverse motto IN GOD WE TRUST. The coinage act of Feb. 12,
1873 discontinued the silver dollar and abolished the legal tender
status of all silver dollars struck from 1794 to 1873. This is the law
later savagely denounced by the vocal partisans of free and unlimited
coinage of silver as the "Crime of `73." Legal tender status
was restored when Morgan dollar striking began in 1878.
SPECIFICATIONS:
Diameter: 38.1 millimeters Weight: 26.73 grams Composition:
.900 silver, .100 copper Edge: Reeded Net Weight: .77344 oz
pure silver
BIBLIOGRAPHY
Alexander, David T., DeLorey, Thomas K. and Reed, P. Bradley,
Coin World Comprehensive Catalog & Encyclopedia of United States
Coins, New York, World Almanac-Pharos Books, 1990.
Bowers, Q. David, Silver Dollars and Trade Dollars of the
United States, Bowers & Merena Galleries, Wolfeboro, NH, 1993.
Breen, Walter, A Unique Liberty Seated Dollar: 1851-O, The
Comprehensive U.S. Silver Dollar Encyclopedia, Highfill Press,
Broken Arrow, OK, 1992.
Breen, Walter, Walter Breen's Complete Encyclopedia of U.S.
and Colonial Coins, F.C.I. Press/Doubleday, New York, 1988.
Vermeule, Cornelius, Numismatic Art in America, The
Belknap Press of Harvard University Press, Cambridge, MA, 1971.
White, Weimar W., The Liberty Seated Dollar 1840-1873,
New York, Sanford J. Durst, 1985.
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