1878-1921 SILVER DOLLAR MORGAN LIBERTY HEAD 
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. Political pressure, not public demand, brought the Morgan dollar into
being. There was no real need for a new silver dollar in the late
1870s; the last previous
"cartwheel," the Liberty Seated dollar, had been legislated
out of existence in 1873, and hardly anyone missed it.
Silver-mining interests did miss the dollar, though,
and lobbied Congress forcefully for its return. The Comstock Lode in
Nevada was yielding huge quantities of silver, with ore worth $36
million being extracted annually. After several futile attempts, the
silver forces in Congress led by Representative Richard ("Silver
Dick") Bland of Missouri finally succeeded in winning
authorization for a new silver dollar when Congress passed the
Bland-Allison Act on February 28, 1878. This Act required the Treasury
to purchase at market levels between two million and four million troy
ounces of silver bullion every month to be coined into dollars. This
amounted to a massive subsidy, coming at a time when the dollar's face
value exceeded its intrinsic worth by nearly 10%.
In November 1877, nearly four months before passage of the
Bland-Allison Act, the Treasury saw the handwriting on the wall and
began making preparations for a new dollar coin. Mint Director Henry
P. Linderman ordered Chief Engraver William Barber and one of his
assistants, George T. Morgan, to prepare pattern dollars, with the best
design to be used on the new coin. Actually, Linderman fixed this
"contest" in Morgan's favor; he had been dissatisfied with
the work of the two Barbers William and his son, Charles, and in 1876
had hired Morgan, a talented British engraver, with plans to entrust
him with new coin designs. At that time, resumption of silver dollar
coinage was not yet planned, and Morgan began work on designs intended
for the half dollar. Following Linderman's orders that a head of
Liberty should replace the full-figure depiction then in use, Morgan
recruited Philadelphia school teacher Anna Willess Williams to pose for
the new design.
Morgan's obverse features a left-facing portrait of
Miss Liberty. The reverse depicts a somewhat scrawny eagle which led
some to vilify the coin as a "buzzard dollar." The designer's
initial M appears on both sides a first. It's on the truncation of
Liberty's neck and on the ribbon's left loop on the reverse. Mintmarks
(O, S, D, and CC) are found below the wreath on the reverse. Points to
check for wear on Morgans are the hair above Liberty's eye and ear,
the high upper fold of her cap and the crest of the eagle's breast.
Soon after production began, someone advised the Mint
that the eagle should have seven tail feathers, instead of the eight
being shown, and Linderman ordered this change. As a result, some 1878
Morgan dollars have eight feathers, some seven and some show seven
over eight. The seven-over-eight variety is the scarcest, though all
are fairly common.
More than half a billion Morgan dollars were struck from
1878 through 1904, with production taking place at the main mint in
Philadelphia and the branches in New Orleans, San Francisco and Carson
City. Carson City production was generally much lower and ended
altogether after that branch was closed in 1893. The coin came back
for one final curtain call in 1921, when more than 86 million examples
were produced under the terms of the Pittman Act at Philadelphia, San
Francisco and Denver but that was a double-edged sword: Under the
1918 legislation, more than 270 million older silver dollars, almost
all Morgans, had been melted. The law required replacements for these,
but most were of the Peace design, which replaced the Morgan version at
the end of 1921.
In all, some 657 million Morgan dollars were produced in
96 different date-and-mint combinations. Hundreds of millions were
melted over the years by the government under the Pittman Act and the
Silver Act of 1942, and by private refiners since the late 1960s, when
rising silver prices made this profitable. Despite all the melting,
Americans had more than enough Morgans to fill their daily needs, since
the dollars circulated regularly only in the West. As a result, huge
stockpiles remained in the Treasury's vaults, as well as bank vaults
nationwide. This explains why so many Morgan dollars are so well
preserved today despite their age; few saw actual use.
Even as the numismatic hobby underwent rapid growth
beginning in the 1930s, interest in other collecting areas far outpaced
the attention paid to the large Morgan cartwheels. Most collectors
preferred the lower face-value coins (with their lower cost) that were
readily available in circulation. Although it was possible to order
silver dollars through banks or directly from the Treasury, few noticed
or cared. In the late 1930s, however, several Washington dealers
learned that the Treasury Department's Cash Room near the White House
was paying out uncirculated Carson City dollars coins having a market
value of $5 or more at the time! More than a few dealers quietly
exploited this discovery throughout the 1940s and `50s.
In the early 1960s, with silver rising in price,
opportunists recognized the chance to turn fast profits by redeeming
silver certificates for dollar coins mostly Morgans at the Treasury.
By the time the government closed this lucrative window in 1964, only
2.9 million cartwheels were left in its vaults, almost all of them
scarce Carson City Morgans. These were dispersed by the General
Services Administration in a series of mail-bid sales from 1972 through
1980, earning big profits for the government and triggering great new
interest in silver dollars.
Interest in Morgans was further heightened by the
publicity surrounding the 400,000+ dollars found in the basement of
Nevada eccentric LaVere Redfield's home. After word leaked out of the
amazing cache, several dealers got into the act, each jockeying for
position in a scramble that ultimately ended with a Probate Court
auction held in January of 1976. At that sale, A-Mark Coins of Los
Angeles captured the hoard with a winning bid of $7.3 million. The
coins were cooperatively marketed by a number of dealers over a period
of several years. Rather than depressing prices, the orderly dispersal
of these coins only served to bring more collectors into the Morgan
dollar fold. Similarly, the early 1980s witnessed the equally successful
distribution of the 1.5 million silver dollars in the Continental Bank
hoard.
The Morgan dollar's story is a Cinderella tale: Until
the 1960s, it was largely ignored by the public. Since then, it has
gradually become among the most widely pursued and desired of all U. S.
coins. Although many collectors find the challenge of assembling a
complete date and mintmark set in Mint State compelling, others satisfy
themselves with collecting just one coin per year. Exceptional
specimens are also sought after by type collectors.
Major keys include 1895, 1893-S, 1895-O, 1892-S,
1889-CC, 1884-S and 1879-CC. Mint records show that 12,000
business-strike dollars were made in Philadelphia in 1895, but only
proofs are known; the mintage of these is 880. Proofs were made for
every year in the series, but only a few brilliant proofs variously
reported at 15 to 24 are known for 1921. Prooflike Morgans also are
highly prized and are collected in both Prooflike (PL) and Deep-Mirror
Prooflike (DPL or DMPL).
Few coins in U.S. history have been greeted with more
indifference at the time of their release than this silver dollar. And
few, if any, have then gone on to stimulate such passionate excitement
among collectors.
SPECIFICATIONS:
Diameter: 38.1 millimeters Weight: 26.73 grams Composition:
.900 silver, .100 copper Edge: Reeded Net weight: .77344
ounce pure silver
BIBLIOGRAPHY:
Bowers, Q. David, Silver Dollars & Trade Dollars of the
United States. A Complete Encyclopedia, Bowers and Merena,
Wolfeboro, NH, 1993.
Breen, Walter,Walter Breen's Complete Encyclopedia of U.S.
and Colonial Coins, F.C.I. Press/Doubleday, New York, 1988.
Fey, Dr. Michael S. and Oxman, Jeff, The Top 100 Morgan
Dollar Varieties: The VAM Keys, RCIPublishing, Morris Plains, NJ,
1996.
Miller, Wayne, The Morgan and Peace Dollar Textbook,
Adam Smith Pub. Co., Metairie, LA, 1982.
Taxay, Don, The U.S. Mint and Coinage, Arco Publishing
Co. Inc., New York, 1966.
Yeoman, R.S., A Guide Book of United States Coins,
47th Edition, Western Publishing Co., Racine, WI, 1993.
Van Allen, Leroy C. & Mallis, A. George, Comprehensive
Catalog and Encyclopedia of Morgan &Peace Dollars, 3rd Edition,
DLRCPress, Virginia Beach, VA 1991.
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