1808 QUARTER EAGLE CAPPED BUST LIBERTY
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 fledgling United
States Mint opened in 1792 with a full complement of machinists,
administrators and other sundry personnel, but it sorely lacked in
artistic talent. After several years of negotiations, Secretary of State
Thomas Jefferson's attempts to hire French inventor Jean Pierre Droz,
one of the finest engravers and coiners in the world, had proved
futile. Mint Director David Rittenhouse appointed artist Joseph Wright
as Chief Engraver in August 1793, but Wright hardly got started before
he died a few weeks later in one of Philadelphia's annual yellow fever
epidemics. Desperate for an engraver, Rittenhouse engaged the aging
Robert Scot, an English born watchmaker and banknote engraver.
Unfortunately Scot's limited talents as a die engraver, exacerbated by
his advancing years and failing eyesight, provided the Mint with
marginal designs at best.
Criticism of Scot's designs was immediate and
widespread, but the hired-for-life Chief Engraver thwarted any effort
to challenge his position. By 1807, Mint Director Robert Patterson
became concerned that the aging Scot could die at any time, leaving the
Mint without a trained replacement.
The logical successor to Scot's post was John Reich. A
refugee from the Napoleonic Wars, Reich had sold himself into
indentured servitude to escape to America. By 1801, his reputation as an
engraver had earned him a recommendation from President Thomas
Jefferson. Reich was assigned miscellaneous jobs at the Mint, but in
deference to the professionally territorial Scot, he was not allowed to
design coins. After six years on the job, Reich's considerable talents
were going to waste, and he began to make preparations to return to his
native Germany. It was at this point that Mint director Patterson
intervened with a well-placed letter to President Jefferson, and Reich
was promoted to Assistant Engraver at an annual salary of 600 dollars,
half of what Scot was earning.
Reich's first assignment was to improve the designs for all
denominations. After preparing dies for the half dollar and half eagle
of 1807, he created a single pair of dies for the quarter eagle of 1808.
Reich's design was a total departure from Scot's Draped Bust/Heraldic
Eagle motif of 1796-1807. Miss Liberty faces left, wearing a mob cap
inscribed with LIBERTY. Critics of the day remarked on the European
influence apparent in Reich's Liberty, and many ridiculed his depiction
as "the artist's fat mistress." On the reverse, Reich replaced
Scot's stiff heraldic eagle with a naturalistic spread-winged bird
perched on an olive branch, holding arrows in its talons. Above the
eagle is a ribbon with the motto E PLURIBUS UNUM, and all are
surrounded by UNITED STATES OF AMERICA and 2 1/2 D. While the coin was
designed with denticles surrounding both sides, apparently these
elements were lightly or incompletely sunk into the die, resulting in
coins that are very weak at the borders.
Only 2,710 coins were struck from these dies, and no
more quarter eagles were produced for more than a dozen years, making
this date an instant rarity. Estimates are that fewer than fifty 1808
quarter eagles exist today in all grades. Most survivors are in the
higher circulated grades, but several mint state examples have appeared
over the years. Even among the low mintage quarter eagles, the 1808 is
a very scarce date. But with so many collectors pursuing design types
alone, this issue has assumed much greater importance than merely
another scarce date in the quarter eagle series. It is one of the
premier rarities in U.S. numismatics and undoubtedly one of the most
eagerly sought of all type coins.
These highly prized coins are held in major gold
collections and rarely enter the numismatic market. No proofs are known
and no special strikings are even rumored to exist. The finest 1808
quarter eagle known traces its pedigree to the collection of the famous
Colonel E.H.R. Green, son of the notorious "Witch of Wall Street,"
fabulously wealthy Hetty Green. Since the 1930s sale of the Colonel's
collection, this remarkable coin has been the cornerstone of gold
collections owned by such notables as Jerome Kern, Dr. J. Hewitt Judd
and Congressman Jimmy Hayes. Its last public appearance was in Stack's
session of Auction `84.
Several circumstances contributed to the small mintage and
subsequent rarity of 1808 quarter eagles. In the early years of the
Mint, depositors of foreign gold or bullion could specify which
denominations they preferred to receive. By 1808, only half eagles and
quarter eagles were in production, and the overwhelming demand was for
half eagles. Banks preferred the half eagles for international payments
and reserves, and rarely ordered the smaller coins. As only one set of
dies was prepared for quarter eagles in 1808, it's obvious the Mint had
no intention of striking any large quantities, but early die failure
probably limited production to far fewer coins than officials had
planned. All but one of the 1808 quarter eagles known today show a die
break on the obverse from the cap through the stars on the right. As
this fracture progressed, most likely the die broke and came apart,
stopping production at that point. With no replacement dies, no more
quarter eagles could be minted, and the minuscule demand for the
denomination didn't justify preparing new dies. Demand remained almost
nonexistent until 1821, when some small orders for the denomination were
again received.
No hoards are known of 1808 quarter eagles and no
reasonably convincing counterfeits have surfaced over the years. These
coins are invariably weak at the rims and softly struck on the
peripheral stars. Because of this, care must be taken to differentiate
actual wear from the effects of a weak strike. On the obverse, friction
first begins to show above the eye and on top of the cap. Wear on the
reverse is first evident on the eagle's wingtips and talons.
After never receiving a raise in a decade and fed up
with Scot's harassment, Reich left the Mint in 1817. Ironically, the
jealous Scot wasted little time in replacing Reich's designs. When the
quarter eagle reappeared in 1821, Scot copied his 1813 half eagle
design for the smaller coin, creating the Capped Head quarter eagle.
Over the next decade, Scot's replacements for Reich's designs were
certainly no artistic leap forward, and are most likely a reflection of
the lingering professional jealousy the tenured Scot harbored for the
talented Reich. Yet, Reich's design of 1808 left a lasting impression on
future Mint engravers. His eagle remained virtually unchanged for the
next century, until finally replaced by the Bela Lyon Pratt design in
1908.
SPECIFICATIONS:
Diameter: 20.6 millimeters Weight: 4.37 grams Composition:
.9167 gold, .0833 copper Edge: Reeded Net Weight: .1288 ounce
of pure gold
BIBLIOGRAPHY:
Akers, David W., United States Gold Coins, Volume II,
Quarter Eagles 1796-1929, Paramount Publications, Englewood, OH,
1975.
Bowers, Q. David, United States Coins by Design Types, An
Action Guide for the Collector and Investor, Bowers & Merena,
Wolfeboro, NH, 1986.
Bowers, Q. David, United States Gold Coins, An Illustrated
History, Bowers & Merena Galleries, Wolfeboro, NH, 1982.
Breen, Walter, Walter Breen's Complete Encyclopedia of U.S.
and Colonial Coins, F.C.I. Press/Doubleday, New York, 1988.
Taglione, Paul, A Reference to United States Federal Gold
Coinage, Volume II, The Quarter Eagles, Numismatic Research and
Service Corporation, Boston, MA, 1986.
Taxay, Don, The U.S. Mint and Coinage, Arco Publishing
Co., New York, 1966.
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