1796-1807 CENT DRAPED BUST 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. At no other time in
American history was the one cent coin so important as it was in the
closing years of the 18th century. Although cumbersome, the large
copper coins were useful for very small transactions, unlike the wide
variety of foreign coins then in circulation. Yet the Mint's ability to
create dies and procure quality copper for these vital coins was
hampered by inadequate machinery, inexperienced employees and lack of
funds, not to mention frequent epidemics of yellow fever. It often cost
more to produce a coin than its face value. Though these failings could
be explained as the growing pains of a new enterprise, Congress on
several occasions almost gave up on the business of making coins and
considered turning the matter over to private companies.
The young Mint was frequently attacked as inefficient. Actually,
if one were to characterize the early years of the Philadelphia
facility, the words "blunder" and "disaster" might
come to mind. Along with a multitude of production difficulties,
adequate supplies of copper were also a problem. The metal was mostly
purchased in the form of planchets or blanks, but the domestic supply
was inferior and resulted in dark, rough flans described as "black
copper" by the Mint. Full of impurities, coins minted from this
metal were of poor quality and wore rapidly. As a result, most of the
copper supply had to be imported, primarily from the Boulton & Watt
Company of Liverpool, England.
The denomination began with the design by Robert Scot in
1793, a flowing haired Liberty with a chain of thirteen links on the
reverse. Almost immediately, objections were raised to the chain design,
as it symbolized slavery and domination rather than the image of unity
that Scot intended. A wreath quickly took its place. Later in 1793,
Joseph's Wright's Liberty Cap design, borrowed from Dupré's
Libertas Americana medal, replaced the wild haired Liberty of the
earlier pieces. Both Scot and John Smith Gardner contributed variations
of this design until a new motif was adopted in July of 1796.
Scot's new Draped Bust design was modeled after a
drawing by artist Gilbert Stuart. It depicts Liberty with flowing hair,
a ribbon behind her head and drapery at her neckline. The inscription
LIBERTY is above the bust and the date below. The reverse features the
denomination ONE CENT, encircled by an open wreath of two olive branches
tied with a bow. UNITED STATES OF AMERICA surrounds the wreath, and the
fraction 1/100 is between the ends of the bow. There are three varieties
of reverses; each varies the leaves and berries on the wreath. They
are known as the "Type of 1794," "Type of 1795" or
"Type of 1797." All three types were used on the reverse of
1796 cents, with the latter two types on the 1797. The last reverse
remained constant on the dates through 1807.
Since the lettering was punched into the dies by hand,
errors abound. Among these are blunders such as the "LIHERTY"
error where the "B" was rotated 180 degrees before being
punched and then crudely corrected, or the "T" over "Y"
blunder in 1802. Other variations involve the spacing and positioning
of the lettering and date. Reverse errors include the wrong fraction,
1/000; a corrected fraction; the 2nd "T" in STATES or the
"U" in UNITED punched inverted, then corrected; a large
fraction punched over a small fraction and a stemless wreath.
Over sixteen million Draped Bust large cents were made
between 1796 and 1807. Although replete with many scarce varieties, the
series has one particularly rare date, 1799. First popularized by early
19th century collector Joseph Mickley's search for his birthyear coin,
the 1799 issue has achieved fame among large cent devotees. Although the
mintage was relatively high, they are elusive in all grades. One story
relating to their short supply opines that thousands of 1799 dated cents
destined for tribal chiefs in exchange for slaves were lost at sea
while being shipped to Africa by a Salem, Massachusetts company.
Because coin collecting wasn't popular until the 1850's,
coins of this era were saved by accident. When copper was scarce or
very high-priced, craftsmen or others who worked with the metal would
buy kegs of copper cents to melt. The large cents also found use as
home medical remedies, hotel key fobs and mechanical devices. Notched
large cents were also used as a means of identification for runaway
slaves on the way north.
Some unopened kegs survived and became the source of
uncirculated specimens. One group of survivors came from a bag of one
thousand pieces bought by Senator Benjamin Goodhue for his daughters
around 1798. Preserved for several generations, they were sold in 1863
by David Nichols of Gallows Hill, near Salem, Massachusetts. Most of the
mint red cents from 1796-97 come from this "Nichols Hoard."
As the popularity of coin collecting grew, a cottage
industry developed both on and off the mint premises to reproduce scarce
dates. Around 1858, the rare date 1804 Draped Bust cent was "restruck"
in copper using dies sold as scrap metal by the mint. These restrikes
can easily be distinguished from the originals as they exhibit evidence
of tooling to correct flaws in the badly rusted dies. Other restrikes
and uniface examples of this date are known in white metal.
Large cent specialists often try to acquire as many
varieties as possible. The guide for this endeavor is in the works of
Dr. William H. Sheldon, Early American Cents and the update
published in 1958 called
Penny Whimsy. General collectors seek large cents by design
type. A representative collection would include only seven coins: The
Chain cent of 1793, the Wreath cent of 1793, the Liberty Cap (1793-96),
the Draped Bust (1796-1807), the Classic Head (1808-1814), the Coronet
Head (1816-1839) and the Braided Hair (1839-57).
Draped Bust large cents suffer from some of the peculiar
characteristics and problems of early coins. It is not unusual to see
clipped planchets and uneven striking. Often the denomination ONE CENT
is very weak, even on uncirculated pieces. When grading this design,
the points to first show wear on the obverse are the hair above the
forehead, the hair above the ear and shoulder and the lines of the
draped bustline. On the reverse, look for wear on the leaves of the
olive branches and the knot of the ribbon.
The Draped Bust design was replaced in 1808 with the
introduction of the "Classic Head" motif by the new Assistant
Engraver, John Reich. The new design was concurrent with an improvement
in die steel allowing, for the first time, an unprecedented 300,000
impressions per working die.
SPECIFICATIONS:
Diameter: 29 millimeters Weight: 10.89 grams Composition:
Copper Edge: Plain
BIBLIOGRAPHY:
Breen, Walter, Walter Breen's Complete Encyclopedia of U.S.
and Colonial Coins, F.C.I. Press/Doubleday, New York, 1988.
Schwarz, Ted, Coins As Living History, Arco Publishing
Co., New York, 1976.
Noyes, William C., United States Large Cents 1793-1814,
Published by the author, Monument Beach, MA, 1991.
Sheldon, William H., Penny Whimsy, Revision of Early
American Cents 1794-1814, Quarterman Publications (reprint), Lawrence,
MA, 1976.
Taxay, Don, The U.S. Mint and Coinage, Arco Publishing
Co., New York, 1966.
Williamson, R. H., "Large Cents That Survived,"
Selections from The Numismatist, United States Coins, Whitman
Publishing Company, Racine, WI, 1960.
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