1908-29 QUARTER EAGLE INDIAN 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. The Saint-Gaudens double
eagle (or $20 gold piece) is frequently acclaimed as the single most
beautiful coin in American history. A case can be made, however, that
two smaller U.S. gold coins from the same historical period are really
much more innovative and daring. And, at the time they made their first
appearance, they were also quite a bit more controversial. These two
coins are the Indian Head quarter and half eagles or, in layman's terms,
the Indian Head $2.50 and $5 gold pieces, respectively.
At the start of the 20th century, the life expectancy of the
average American was less than 50 years. But the four gold coins then
being issued by Uncle Sam had all been around without a major design
change for more than 50 years. Three, in fact, had carried the same
design, a portrait of Miss Liberty wearing a coronet, for more than 60
years.
Clearly, it was time for a change, and in 1901 the
groundwork was laid for that change when Theodore Roosevelt succeeded
to the presidency upon the assassination of William McKinley. The
restless, dynamic Roosevelt was a quintessential agent of change,
taking a personal interest and stamping his imprint upon the entire
gamut of national lifeincluding U.S. coinage.
It was Roosevelt who arranged for famed sculptor
Augustus Saint-Gaudens to redesign the double eagle and eagle (or $10
gold piece), and he basked in reflected glory when the stunning new
coins debuted to rave reviews in 1907. He then gave his personal
blessing to redesigning the two remaining gold coins the following year.
The Indian Head quarter eagle and its larger companion,
the half eagle, stand out from all the rest of United States coinage
because their relief is incuse: instead of being raised above the
surface and protected by a rim, the designs and the lettering are
sunken in a plane that is uniformly flat.
The concept for such coins came from a Boston physician
and art lover named William Sturgis Bigelow, who happened to be a close
friend of Teddy Roosevelt's. Bigelow's interest apparently had been
stimulated by Egyptian reliefs in the Boston Museum of Fine Arts, and
although there was no modern precedent for the use of this technique in
producing coins, he and Roosevelt both thought the notion had merit.
Another prominent Bostonian, sculptor Bela Lyon Pratt,
got the assignment of fashioning designs. Unlike Saint-Gaudens who had
come up with different designs for the double eagle and eagle, Pratt
provided identical portraits for both of the smaller coins, but their
dignity and strength amply justify this added exposure.
The obverse depicts a realistic-looking Indian brave in
a war bonnet, with the date, 13 stars and the motto LIBERTY forming a
circle around this central device. The reverse shows an eagle in repose,
perched upon fasces and an olive branch, the intertwined symbols of
preparedness and peace. Through judicious sizing and placement, Pratt
succeeded in incorporating four different inscriptions on this side,
(UNITED STATES OF AMERICA, E PLURIBUS UNUM, IN GOD WE TRUST and the
statement of value) without causing the coin to seem unbalanced,
cluttered or cramped.
The public of 1908 received the coin with mixed
feelings. Although many appreciated the design's artistic merits, others
immediately found fault. Some felt neither the Indian nor the eagle
were properly represented, while others questioned the coin's ability
to stack properly. Inevitably, the incusing of the design elements,
being unfamiliar, also stirred criticism. Philadelphia coin dealer
Samuel H. Chapman found it particularly objectionable, warning President
Roosevelt that the "sunken design" would lead to a multitude
of problems, including counterfeiting and even illness (he maintained
that the recessed areas would become clogged with filth and convey
disease). The president remained unshakable, however, in his support for
the coins.
Indian Head quarter eagles were issued annually from
1908 through 1915. At that point, the Mint suspended their production
for a decade; when it resumed in 1925, the coins were struck for five
more years before the series ended in 1929one of many victims of that
year's Wall Street crash. As the depression took hold, what little gold
came into the Mint was used for production of double eagles. With the
cessation of gold coinage and the Great Recall of 1934, the quarter
eagle would not return.
With just 15 different date-and-mint combinations (12
issues from the Philadelphia Mint and three from Denver), the series is
one of the smallest in U.S. coinage, making a complete set attainable
for many collectors despite the relatively high cost of buying anything
made of gold. Its affordability is enhanced by the fact that only one
coin, the 1911-D, is notably scarce; at 55,680, it's the only coin with
a mintage of less than 240,000. The Denver mintmark can be found on the
reverse, to the left of the arrowheads. Relatively small numbers of
matte proofs were made in every year from 1908 through 1915, but not in
the final five years. The flat matte finish of the proofs proved
unpopular with collectors of the day, and many remained unsold, to later
be melted by the Mint.
Being recessed, the design elements on Indian Head
quarter eagles are protected from excessive wear. At the same time,
this complicates the grading of these coins, since the patterns of
normal wear differ from those of raised-relief coins. Critical areas
for detecting traces of wear are the Indian's cheekbone and headdress
feathers and the shoulder of the eagle's left wing. Although these
coins are relatively plentiful in grades up to Mint State-64, a sharp
drop-off occurs above that level and very few examples exist in grades
of Mint State-66 and above. Counterfeits of many dates exist, and some
are very deceiving. Any questionable piece should be authenticated.
The Indian Head quarter eagle may not be quite as
magnificent as the Saint-Gaudens coinage, but it has its fair share of
admirers and has long since overcome its early criticism.
SPECIFICATIONS:
Diameter: 18 millimeters Weight: 4.18 grams Composition:
.900 gold, .100 copper Edge: Reeded Net Weight: .12094 ounce
pure gold
BIBLIOGRAPHY:
Akers, David W., United States Gold Coins, Volume II Quarter
Eagles 1796-1929, Paramount Publications, Englewood, OH, 1975.
Breen, Walter, Walter Breen's Complete Encyclopedia of U.S.
and Colonial Coins, F.C.I. Press/Doubleday, New York, 1988.
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.
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