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Mercury dime

The Mercury dime is a ten-cent coin struck by the United States Mint from late 1916 to 1945. Designed by Adolph Weinman and also referred to as the Winged Liberty Head dime, it gained its common name because the obverse depiction of a young Liberty, identifiable by her winged Phrygian cap, was confused with the Roman god Mercury. Weinman is believed to have used Elsie Stevens, the wife of lawyer and poet Wallace Stevens, as a model. The coin's reverse depicts a fasces, symbolizing unity and strength, and an olive branch, signifying peace.

Mercury (Winged Liberty) dime
United States
Value10 cents (0.10 U.S. dollar)
Mass2.500 g
Diameter17.91 mm (0.705 in)
Edge118 reeds
Composition0.900 silver, 0.100 copper
Gold2016 gold commemorative version: 0.9999 fine, diameter 16.5 mm, mass 0.10 troy oz
Silver0.07234 troy oz
Years of minting1916–1945
Mint marksD, S, (2016 only) W. Located on reverse between letter "E" in "ONE" and the base of the olive branch. Philadelphia Mint specimens lack mint mark.
Obverse
DesignA young Liberty, with winged cap
DesignerAdolph Weinman
Design date1916
Reverse
DesignOlive branch, fasces
DesignerAdolph Weinman
Design date1916

By 1916, the dime, quarter, and half dollar designed by Mint Chief Engraver Charles E. Barber had been struck for 25 years, and could be replaced by the Treasury, of which the Mint is a part, without Congressional authorization. Mint officials were under the misapprehension that the designs had to be changed, and held a competition among three sculptors, in which Barber, who had been in his position for 36 years, also took part. Weinman's designs for the dime and half dollar were selected.

Although the new coin's design was admired for its beauty, the Mint made modifications to it upon learning that vending machine manufacturers were having difficulties making the new dime work in their devices. The coin continued to be minted until 1945, when the Treasury ordered that a new design, featuring recently deceased president Franklin Roosevelt, take its place. The Mercury dime was minted again but in gold for its centenary in 2016.

Inception edit

On September 26, 1890, the United States Congress passed an act providing:

The Director of the Mint shall have power, with the approval of the Secretary of the Treasury, to cause new designs ... to be prepared and adopted ... But no change in the design or die of any coin shall be made oftener than once in twenty-five years from and including the year of the first adoption of the design ... But the Director of the Mint shall nevertheless have power, with the approval of the Secretary of the Treasury, to engage temporarily the services of one or more artists, distinguished in their respective departments of art, who shall be paid for such service from the contingent appropriation for the mint at Philadelphia.[1]

The Barber coinage had been introduced in 1892; similar dimes, quarter dollars, and half dollars, all designed by Mint Chief Engraver Charles E. Barber. The introduction had followed a design competition to replace the Seated Liberty coinage, which had been struck since the 1830s.[2] The Mint had offered only a small prize to the winner, and all invited artists refused to submit entries. The competition was open to the public, and the judging committee found no entry suitable.[3] Mint Director Edward Leech responded to the failed competition by directing Barber to prepare new designs for the dime, quarter, and half dollar. The Barber coinage, after its release,[3] attracted considerable public dissatisfaction.[4]

Beginning in 1905, successive presidential administrations had attempted to bring modern, beautiful designs to United States coins.[5] Following the redesign of the double eagle, eagle, half eagle and quarter eagle in 1907 and 1908, as well as the penny and nickel redesigns of 1909 and 1913 respectively, advocates of replacing the Barber coins began to push for the change when the coins' minimum term expired in 1916. As early as 1914, Victor David Brenner, designer of the Lincoln cent, submitted unsolicited designs for the silver coins. He was told in response that Secretary of the Treasury William G. McAdoo was completely occupied with other matters.[6]

On January 2, 1915, an interview with Philadelphia Mint Superintendent Adam M. Joyce appeared in the Michigan Manufacturer and Financial Record:

So far as I know ... there is no thought of issuing new coins of the 50-cent, 25-cent, and 10-cent values. If, however, a change is made we all hope that more serviceable and satisfactory coins are produced than the recent Saint-Gaudens double eagle and eagle and the Pratt half and quarter eagle. The buffalo nickel and the Lincoln penny are also faulty from a practical standpoint. All resulted from the desire by the government to mint coins to the satisfaction of artists and not practical coiners.[7]

 
Philadelphia Mint Superintendent Adam M. Joyce decried the Lincoln cent and other new coinage, believing that they struck badly. Plaquette by George T. Morgan.

In January 1915, Assistant Secretary of the Treasury William P. Malburn sent McAdoo a memorandum about the silver subsidiary coinage, noting that "the present silver half dollar, quarter, and dime were changed in 1892, and a new design may, therefore, be adopted in 1916. This can be done any time in the year."[8] In reply, McAdoo wrote "[l]et the mint submit designs before we try anyone else." on the memorandum.[9]

In April 1915, Robert W. Woolley took office as Mint Director. On April 14, he asked Superintendent Joyce to request Chief Engraver Barber, then in his 36th year in office, to prepare new designs. The same day, Malburn requested the opinion of the Treasury Department's Solicitor concerning the Mint view that it could strike new designs for the three denominations in 1916. On April 17, the Solicitor's Office responded that the Mint could change the designs.[10] At the time, the Mint was intensely busy producing the Panama-Pacific commemorative coin issue, and immediate action was not taken.[9] In October, Barber was summoned to Washington to discuss coin designs with Woolley, though it is uncertain whether or not he had already prepared sketches for the new coinage.[10]

On December 3, Woolley met with the Commission of Fine Arts. Woolley asked the Commission to view sketches produced by the Mint's engraving department. Barber was present to explain the coinage process to the Commission members. Woolley suggested to the members that if they did not like the Mint's work, they should select sculptors to submit designs for the new pieces. It was Woolley's intent to have distinct designs for the dime, quarter and half dollar—previously, the three pieces had been near-identical.[11] The director informed the Commission that as the existing coinage had been in use for 25 years, it would have to be changed—something which numismatic historian David Lange calls a "misinterpretation of the coinage laws".[12]

The Commission disliked the sketches from the Mint (submitted by Barber)[13] and selected sculptors Adolph Weinman, Hermon MacNeil and Albin Polasek to submit proposals for the new coins. The sculptors could submit multiple sketches. Although the Mint could decide to use a design on a denomination not intended by its sculptor, the designs were not fully interchangeable—by statute, an eagle had to appear on the reverse of the quarter and half dollar, but could not appear on the dime. Woolley hoped that each sculptor would be successful with one piece.[14]

 
Mint Director Robert W. Woolley (seen on his Mint medal, designed by Assistant Engraver George T. Morgan) advocated for the end of the Barber coinage, though he may not have understood he did not have to replace them.

The three sculptors submitted design sketches in mid-February, and on February 23 met with Woolley in New York so the artists could make presentations of the work to him and answer his questions. After discussions between Woolley and McAdoo, Weinman was notified on February 28 that five of his sketches had been selected—for the dime and half dollar, and the reverse of the quarter. The same day, Woolley wrote to MacNeil to tell him he would sculpt the quarter's obverse, and to Polasek to inform him of his lack of success.[15] Members of the Commission persuaded Woolley that so much should not be entrusted to a single artist, and MacNeil was allowed to design both sides of the quarter, subject to his making modifications to his submission.[16]

On March 3, the new coins were publicly announced, with the Treasury noting, "[d]esigns of these coins must be changed by law every 25 years and the present 25 year period ends with 1916."[17] The press release indicated that the Treasury hoped production of the new coins would begin in about two months, once the designs were finalized. The same day, Woolley wrote to Mint Engraver Barber, telling him that his sketches were rejected, and that models from Weinman and MacNeil would arrive at the Philadelphia Mint no later than May 1.[17] According to numismatic historian Walter Breen, Barber became "sullen and totally uncooperative".[18] Lange notes that "numerous delays were encountered as the artists fine-tuned their models while simultaneously avoiding obstacles thrown in their path by Barber. While his observations regarding many aspects of practical coinage were quite accurate, they clearly could have been presented in a more constructive manner."[19] In his book on Mercury dimes, Lange notes that Barber, by then aged 75, had been "compelled over the past ten years to participate in the systematic undoing of a lifetime's achievements"; he had to participate in the process which resulted in coins designed by others replacing ones designed by him.[20]

With the new pieces, all American coins would have had a recent change of design (the Morgan dollar was not then being struck).[21] According to a column in The Art World magazine later in 1916,

Since that day [the 19th century] much artistic progress has taken place in our coinage. Sculptors of reputation have been employed with admirable results ...And now we are to have a new half dollar and a new dime by Weinman and a new quarter by McNeill [sic]. Altogether, in the retrospect, it seems an incredible achievement.[22]

Design edit

 
Adolph Weinman is widely believed to have used his neighbor, Elsie Stevens, as the model for the Mercury dime.

Weinman never disclosed the name of the model for the obverse, and no person ever claimed to have been her. The winged Liberty is widely believed, however, to have been based on a 1913 bust Weinman sculpted of Elsie Stevens, wife of Wallace Stevens.[23] A lawyer and insurance executive, Wallace Stevens later became famous as a poet; Wallace and Elsie Stevens rented an apartment from Weinman from 1909 to 1916. In a draft of his unpublished autobiography, Woolley wrote that Weinman refused to name the model, but told him it was the wife of a lawyer who lived above his Manhattan apartment (Woolley, in a later version, omitted the location, saying only that Weinman said it was the wife of a lawyer friend). Woolley recorded that he was told that the model wore the top of an old pair of stockings to simulate the cap. In 1966, Holly Stevens, Wallace and Elsie's daughter, noted in her edition of her father's letters that Elsie had been the model for Weinman's dime and half dollar.[23] Liberty's features also bear a resemblance to the face of Victory in Weinman's 1909 statuary group erected in Baltimore, the Union Soldiers and Sailors' Monument.[24]

 
Weinman's 1909 statue of Victory in Baltimore's Union Soldiers and Sailors' Monument has features said to bear a resemblance to those on the Mercury dime.

Weinman's dime depicts Liberty with a wreath of tight curls, and wearing a traditional pileus, or Liberty cap. His depiction of the pileus as a winged cap has provoked comparisons with Roman Republic denarii, which art historian Cornelius Vermeule considered superficial. Weinman wrote that he considered the winged cap to symbolize "liberty of thought".[25] Vermeule suggests that one reason for the use of wings was that Weinman, in common with many in the tradition of Augustus Saint-Gaudens, under whom Weinman had studied, liked the effect of feathers done in relief.[25] The reverse depicts a fasces, the object carried by lictors, who accompanied Roman magistrates; on the coin it represents war and justice. It is contrasted with a large olive branch symbolizing peace.[25][26] According to Breen, "Weinman's symbolic message in this design ... was clearly an updated 'Don't tread on me'".[18] The fasces is bound both horizontally and diagonally by a leather strap, with the loose ends at the bottom.[26] The lettering is in Roman style, and is made as discreet as possible.[25] Weinman's monogram, AW, appears on the obverse, midway between the date and the letter Y in "LIBERTY".[19] The mintmark is located on the reverse, to the right of the first E in "ONE DIME".[27]

Woolley described the design in his 1916 report to the Secretary of the Treasury:

The design of the dime, owing to the smallness of the coin, has been held quite simple. The obverse shows a head of Liberty with winged cap. The head is simple and firm in form, the profile forceful. The reverse shows a design of the bundle of rods, with battle-ax, known as "Fasces", and symbolical of unity, wherein lies the nation's strength. Surrounding the fasces is a full-foliaged branch of olive, symbolical of peace.[28]

Preparation edit

 
A pattern of the 1916 Mercury dime as illustrated in that year's Mint Director's Report. Note that the head is further to the right of the coin than on the issued piece and the head covers less of the "E". Weinman's monogram is also absent.

After Weinman's success in the competition, he visited the Mint to discuss conversion of his models to finished dies. The first time, he found Barber absent, but had a productive talk with long-time Assistant Engraver George T. Morgan. Other visits followed, and on March 29, Woolley wrote to Superintendent Joyce, "confidentially, the sculptors designing the new coins felt that on their last trip Mr. Morgan was much more cordial and cooperative than Mr. Barber was. I realize I am dealing with artistic temperaments at both ends."[29] A severe case of tonsillitis delayed Weinman's work, and caused him to request an extension of the May 1 deadline. On May 29, Woolley wrote Weinman that the designs, both for the dime and half dollar, were accepted by the Mint.[20]

As no Barber pieces of any of the three denominations had been struck in 1916, the pent-up demand was high. On June 24, Woolley wrote to Joyce:

The dime is all right. Please see that working dies for the three mints are made as rapidly as possible, in order that the coinage of the new dimes may be begun quickly. The demand for these coins is exceedingly great. Everyone to whom the coins have been shown here thinks they are beautiful. I beg to enjoin you not to pay out any of the new dimes until you have received special instructions from this office.[10]

Two days later, work on dies was stopped when it was decided that the lettering was insufficiently distinct. The delay, however, did not prevent the Mint from authorizing payment to Weinman for his designs.[20] On July 15, Woolley resigned as Mint director to work as publicity chairman of the Wilson reelection campaign. As the new director, Friedrich Johannes Hugo von Engelken, did not take office until September 1, 1916, Fred H. Chaffin became acting director. With none of the new designs ready for production, and small change in great demand, the Mint had no alternative other than to strike Barber dimes and quarters by the million.[10]

After the lettering problems were addressed, Acting Director Chaffin halted production of Barber dimes on August 29, and ordered production of the Mercury dime to begin the following day at the Philadelphia Mint. Barber had prepared dies for the Denver and San Francisco mints, but they were still in transit. Small quantities of the new dime had been sent to vending machine and pay phone manufacturers; on September 6, two companies reported problems with the coins. AT&T complained that the new dimes were too thick and would not work in their phones. American Sales Machines (owned by Clarence W. Hobbs, whose complaints had delayed the Buffalo nickel) requested design changes so that its counterfeit detector could work. Von Engelken ordered production of the dimes halted. In reality, the dime was not too thick, but the rim of the coin struck too high, a defect known as a "fin". This had been an ongoing problem as Weinman's design was produced, but was thought to have been corrected.[30] No dimes had yet been struck at the two western mints. Minting of Barber dimes resumed. After an article quoting Joyce appeared in the press, Von Engelken instructed his staff not to speak to reporters.[10]

The problems with the dime were a potential embarrassment with a presidential campaign underway. McAdoo enquired how much time would be required for another design to be struck; he was informed it would take months. Instead, Weinman prepared modified designs, separating the letters of "LIBERTY" slightly from the rim, and lowering the relief. McAdoo approved the revised design on September 28. These changes assuaged the concerns of both firms. Von Engelken authorized Joyce to produce coinage dies on October 6, and the new coins were put into production. The earlier strikes, including those reclaimed from the testing companies, were melted, though one specimen is currently known to exist.[31]

Release and production; name and design controversies edit

 
The 1916 United States Assay Commission met on February 9 and February 10, 1916, to test coins from the previous year to ensure they met specifications. Among the members and Mint officials shown were then-Mint Director Robert W. Woolley (standing fourth from left), Engraver of the United States Mint at Philadelphia Charles E. Barber (standing third from left) and Philadelphia Mint Superintendent Adam Joyce (standing at far right).

The Mercury dime was released into circulation on October 30, 1916, the same day that production of the Barber dime ceased.[32] Several newspapers complained that Weinman's monogram was too prominent on the obverse; according to The New York Times, the Treasury was considering removal.[32] On November 4, Weinman enquired of Joyce whether any removal was contemplated; he received in reply compliments on his design and Joyce's statement that the Mint was not responsible for what appeared in print. Weinman wrote again, hoping to make changes to the dime, but was told that only an act of Congress could change the design.[33]

Of the three circulating coins first struck in 1916, the Mercury dime was particularly praised. On the first day of circulation, quantities sold were limited at banks. One Minneapolis newspaper dubbed it the "battle ax" or "golf" dime, reflecting a lack of knowledge concerning the fasces.[34] A letter to the editor in the January 1917 The Numismatist appears to be the first numismatic reference to the coin by the nickname "Mercury".[35] Lange traced the history of this misnomer,

This misattribution appeared almost immediately in the popular press, as writers imagined that the obviously female Liberty was actually a representation of Mercury, messenger to the Roman gods of mythology and quite certainly a male. It is popularly known as the Mercury Dime even today, despite noble but ill-fated attempts by some publications to reverse this error.[10]

Chief Engraver Barber died on February 18, 1917, having served 37 years in office. His successor was the 72-year-old Morgan, who had served under Barber for his entire tenure.[36]

The dime was struck in substantial numbers until 1930, with the notable exception of the 1916-D issue and from 1921 to 1923, when an economic downturn caused the need for coins to diminish. No dimes were struck for 1922, the first time since 1826 that this had occurred. With the onset of the Great Depression, mintages dropped again in 1930 and 1931; coinage of dimes was suspended entirely in 1932 and 1933. The low-mintage dates are not rare today as many were hoarded, and 1930- and 1931-dated dimes proved readily available from the banks once the economy improved. With the economy beginning to pick up again, coinage resumed in 1934, and the dime was struck in large numbers each year through the end of the series.[10][37]

In the early 1930s, with the rise of fascist movements in Europe, objections began to be raised in the United States to the presence of fasces, the emblem of Mussolini's National Fascist Party, on the dime's reverse. However, defenders of the dime stressed that the fasces were meant as a symbol of unity.[38]

The death of President Franklin Roosevelt in April 1945 brought immediate calls for a coin to be issued with his image. As Roosevelt had been closely associated with the March of Dimes, and as the dime's design could be replaced without the need for congressional action as it had been struck for more than 25 years, the Treasury chose that denomination to honor Roosevelt. Mint Chief Engraver John R. Sinnock, Morgan's successor, executed the design featuring Roosevelt, which replaced the Mercury dime in 1946, making 1945 the last year in which it was produced. According to Mint Director Nellie Tayloe Ross, a total of 2,677,232,488 Mercury dimes were struck.[10]

Collecting edit

 
The Mint medal for Director Friedrich Johannes Hugo von Engelken, designed by George T. Morgan, who was then assistant engraver.

The 1916-D Mercury dime, struck at the Denver Mint, is the key date of the series, with a mintage of 264,000 pieces.[10] The low mintage is because in November 1916, von Engelken informed the three mint superintendents of a large order for quarters, and instructed that Denver strike only quarters until it was filled. Striking of dimes at Denver did not resume until well into 1917, making the 1917-D relatively rare as well.[39]

Few varieties are known in the Mercury dime series.[40] The 1942/41 is generally termed an overdate; it is actually a doubled die error—the obverse die from which the coins were struck took one impression from a 1942-dated hub and one from a 1941-dated hub (until the 1990s, dies required two strikes from a hub for the design to be fully impressed). Sinnock stated that the pieces were most likely struck in late 1941, when preparation of the 1942 dies was under way.[41] Also produced at that time, though less apparent to the naked eye, was the 1942/1-D. Another popular variety is the 1945-S "Micro S", with a smaller-than-normal mintmark. This variety was caused by the Mint's wartime use of a puncheon (used to impress mintmarks on dies and hubs) which had been made for use with early 20th century Philippine coinage struck at San Francisco, which had only a small space for the mintmark.[42] Beginning in 1928, coin albums were issued by private publishers, mostly in folder form, which were widely used to collect the pieces. This led to a great increase in interest in collecting current coinage by date and mintmark.[41]

Many Mercury dimes were not fully struck, meaning that design detail was lost even before the coins entered circulation. Exceptionally well-struck dimes display "full bands", that is, the horizontal bands on the fasces show full detail. In circulation, the reverse tended to more readily display wear due to a lower rim in relation to the relief of the design. Most well-circulated dimes show more wear to the reverse.[43]

Although no 1923 or 1930 dimes were struck at Denver, specimens appearing to be 1923-D or 1930-D dimes may be encountered. These counterfeits are struck in good silver, allowing the coiner to profit on the difference between the cost of production and the face value. They did not appear until after World War II, are invariably found in worn condition, and are believed to have been struck in the Soviet Union, a country known to have counterfeited US coins during World War II.[44]

Project Mercury edit

Several Mercury dimes were flown into space on July 21, 1961, on the Mercury-Redstone 4 sub-orbital mission, the second manned flight of Project Mercury and the second human space flight by the United States. The coins sank with the capsule in the Atlantic Ocean, but were later recovered with the capsule from a depth of nearly 16,000 ft (4,900 m) in 1999.[45][46]

2016 centennial gold version edit

 
2016-W Gold Mercury dime

The Mint released a centennial version, in gold, of the Mercury dime on April 21, 2016, sold through the Mint's official website. Demand was so high that orders were no longer able to be placed within 45 minutes of the coin becoming available.[47][48][49] On April 26, the Mint reported that it had sold 122,510 units, just 2,490 pieces away from the item's maximum allowable mintage.[50] The remainder, which included about as many as 8,000 to 9,000 coins that were unsold or returned to the mint from prior sales, were offered for sale on December 15, 2016, with a limit of one per customer, and sold out within 90 minutes.[51]

References edit

  1. ^ Richardson 1891, pp. 806–807, 26 Stat L. 484, amendment to R.S. §3510.
  2. ^ Breen 1988, pp. 572–573.
  3. ^ a b Lange 2006, p. 134.
  4. ^ Lange 2006, p. 136.
  5. ^ Burdette 2005, p. 12.
  6. ^ Burdette 2005, p. 13.
  7. ^ Michigan Manufacturing and Financial Journal, January 2, 1915.
  8. ^ Burdette 2005, pp. 13–14.
  9. ^ a b Burdette 2005, p. 14.
  10. ^ a b c d e f g h i Lange, History of the Mercury dimes.
  11. ^ Burdette 2005, pp. 14–15.
  12. ^ Lange 1993, p. 3.
  13. ^ Burdette 2005, p. 16.
  14. ^ Burdette 2005, pp. 19–20.
  15. ^ Burdette 2005, pp. 22–23.
  16. ^ Burdette 2005, pp. 26–27.
  17. ^ a b Lange 1993, pp. 4–5.
  18. ^ a b Breen 1988, p. 326.
  19. ^ a b Lange 2006, p. 150.
  20. ^ a b c Lange 1993, p. 4.
  21. ^ Vermeule 1971, p. 139.
  22. ^ The Art World.
  23. ^ a b Burdette 2005, p. 172.
  24. ^ Burdette 2005, p. 173.
  25. ^ a b c d Vermeule 1971, p. 145.
  26. ^ a b Lange, October 2012, p. 42.
  27. ^ Breen 1988, p. 327.
  28. ^ Woolley 1916, p. 8.
  29. ^ Taxay 1983, pp. 347–348.
  30. ^ Burdette 2005, pp. 60–61.
  31. ^ Burdette 2005, pp. 62–65, 105.
  32. ^ a b Burdette 2005, p. 65.
  33. ^ Burdette 2005, p. 66.
  34. ^ Burdette 2005, p. 93.
  35. ^ Burdette 2005, p. 94.
  36. ^ Burdette 2005, p. 178.
  37. ^ Lange, October 2012.
  38. ^ Romm, James (23 November 2023). "Authoritarianism's Emblem". The New York Review of Books. Vol. LXX, no. 18. p. 48. Retrieved 16 November 2023.
  39. ^ Lange, October 2012, pp. 42–43.
  40. ^ Lange, Mercury dimes: 1942/41.
  41. ^ a b Lange, Mercury dimes: Collecting.
  42. ^ Lange, Mercury dimes: 1945-S Micro S.
  43. ^ Lange, Mercury dimes: Grading.
  44. ^ Lange, Mercury dimes: Counterfeit & Altered Coins.
  45. ^ Ocean News & Technology. Technology Systems Corporation.
  46. ^ Joseph A. Angelo (May 14, 2014). Human Spaceflight. Infobase Publishing. pp. 87–. ISBN 978-1-4381-0891-9.
  47. ^ Mint News Blog (April 20, 2016). . US Mint News Blog. Archived from the original on April 26, 2016. Retrieved April 28, 2016.
  48. ^ CoinWeek News Staff (April 21, 2016). "U.S. Mint Sells Out Current Stock of 2016 Mercury Dime Centennial Gold Coin". CoinWeek. Longwood, FL. Retrieved April 28, 2016.
  49. ^ Harper, Dave (April 22, 2016). "Nostalgia goes for the gold". Numismatic News. Palm Coast, FL. Retrieved April 28, 2016.
  50. ^ Holmes, Dan (April 25, 2016). . US Mint News Blog. Archived from the original on April 29, 2016. Retrieved April 28, 2016.
  51. ^ Joe O'Donnell (December 15, 2016). "The gold 'Mercury' dimes released Thursday are already sold out". Coin World. Retrieved December 31, 2016.

Bibliography

  • Breen, Walter (1988). Walter Breen's Complete Encyclopedia of U.S. and Colonial Coins. New York, N.Y.: Doubleday. ISBN 978-0-385-14207-6.
  • Burdette, Roger W. (2005). Renaissance of American Coinage, 1916–1921. Great Falls, Va.: Seneca Mill Press LLC. ISBN 978-0-9768986-0-3.
  • Lange, David W. (1993). A Complete Guide Book to Mercury Dimes. Virginia Beach, Va.: DLRC Press. ISBN 978-1-880731-17-8.
  • Lange, David W. (2006). History of the United States Mint and its Coinage. Atlanta, Ga.: Whitman Publishing LLC. ISBN 978-0-7948-1972-9.
  • Richardson, William Allen, ed. (1891). Supplement to the revised statutes of the United States. Vol. 1. Washington, D.C.: US Government Printing Office. Retrieved February 13, 2012.
  • Taxay, Don (1983) [1966]. The U.S. Mint and Coinage (reprint ed.). New York, N.Y.: Sanford J. Durst Numismatic Publications. ISBN 978-0-915262-68-7.
  • Vermeule, Cornelius (1971). Numismatic Art in America. Cambridge, Mass.: The Belknap Press of Harvard University Press. ISBN 978-0-674-62840-3.

Other sources

  • "The Administration and its Attitude to Art: The Coinage". The Art World. 1 (1). New York: The Kalon Publishing Company, Inc.: 19–20, 74 October 1916. JSTOR 25587646.
  • Carter, Frank E. (January 2, 1915). "Don't want coin designs changed". Michigan Manufacturing and Financial Journal. Detroit, Mich.: Manufacturers Publishing Company: 16. Retrieved October 20, 2011. adam m joyce superintendent.
  • Lange, David (January 9, 2005). . DLRC Press. Archived from the original on August 12, 2012. Retrieved September 16, 2012.
  • Lange, David (January 9, 2005). . DLRC Press. Archived from the original on April 25, 2012. Retrieved February 13, 2012.
  • Lange, David (January 9, 2005). . DLRC Press. Archived from the original on January 20, 2012. Retrieved February 13, 2012.
  • Lange, David (January 9, 2005). . DLRC Press. Archived from the original on January 19, 2012. Retrieved February 13, 2012.
  • Lange, David (January 9, 2005). . DLRC Press. Archived from the original on April 25, 2012. Retrieved February 13, 2012.
  • Lange, David (January 9, 2005). . DLRC Press. Archived from the original on August 14, 2012. Retrieved February 13, 2012.
  • Lange, David (October 2012). "Collecting Mercury dimes". The Numismatist. Colorado Springs, Co.: American Numismatic Association: 40–46.
  • Woolley, Robert W. (1916). "Annual Report of the Director of the Mint for the Fiscal Year Ended June 30, 1916". Washington, D.C.: US Government Printing Office. p. 8. Archived from the original on April 15, 2013. Retrieved February 13, 2012.

mercury, dime, cent, coin, struck, united, states, mint, from, late, 1916, 1945, designed, adolph, weinman, also, referred, winged, liberty, head, dime, gained, common, name, because, obverse, depiction, young, liberty, identifiable, winged, phrygian, confused. The Mercury dime is a ten cent coin struck by the United States Mint from late 1916 to 1945 Designed by Adolph Weinman and also referred to as the Winged Liberty Head dime it gained its common name because the obverse depiction of a young Liberty identifiable by her winged Phrygian cap was confused with the Roman god Mercury Weinman is believed to have used Elsie Stevens the wife of lawyer and poet Wallace Stevens as a model The coin s reverse depicts a fasces symbolizing unity and strength and an olive branch signifying peace Mercury Winged Liberty dimeUnited StatesValue10 cents 0 10 U S dollar Mass2 500 gDiameter17 91 mm 0 705 in Edge118 reedsComposition0 900 silver 0 100 copperGold2016 gold commemorative version 0 9999 fine diameter 16 5 mm mass 0 10 troy ozSilver0 07234 troy ozYears of minting1916 1945Mint marksD S 2016 only W Located on reverse between letter E in ONE and the base of the olive branch Philadelphia Mint specimens lack mint mark ObverseDesignA young Liberty with winged capDesignerAdolph WeinmanDesign date1916ReverseDesignOlive branch fascesDesignerAdolph WeinmanDesign date1916By 1916 the dime quarter and half dollar designed by Mint Chief Engraver Charles E Barber had been struck for 25 years and could be replaced by the Treasury of which the Mint is a part without Congressional authorization Mint officials were under the misapprehension that the designs had to be changed and held a competition among three sculptors in which Barber who had been in his position for 36 years also took part Weinman s designs for the dime and half dollar were selected Although the new coin s design was admired for its beauty the Mint made modifications to it upon learning that vending machine manufacturers were having difficulties making the new dime work in their devices The coin continued to be minted until 1945 when the Treasury ordered that a new design featuring recently deceased president Franklin Roosevelt take its place The Mercury dime was minted again but in gold for its centenary in 2016 Contents 1 Inception 2 Design 3 Preparation 4 Release and production name and design controversies 5 Collecting 5 1 Project Mercury 6 2016 centennial gold version 7 ReferencesInception editOn September 26 1890 the United States Congress passed an act providing The Director of the Mint shall have power with the approval of the Secretary of the Treasury to cause new designs to be prepared and adopted But no change in the design or die of any coin shall be made oftener than once in twenty five years from and including the year of the first adoption of the design But the Director of the Mint shall nevertheless have power with the approval of the Secretary of the Treasury to engage temporarily the services of one or more artists distinguished in their respective departments of art who shall be paid for such service from the contingent appropriation for the mint at Philadelphia 1 The Barber coinage had been introduced in 1892 similar dimes quarter dollars and half dollars all designed by Mint Chief Engraver Charles E Barber The introduction had followed a design competition to replace the Seated Liberty coinage which had been struck since the 1830s 2 The Mint had offered only a small prize to the winner and all invited artists refused to submit entries The competition was open to the public and the judging committee found no entry suitable 3 Mint Director Edward Leech responded to the failed competition by directing Barber to prepare new designs for the dime quarter and half dollar The Barber coinage after its release 3 attracted considerable public dissatisfaction 4 Beginning in 1905 successive presidential administrations had attempted to bring modern beautiful designs to United States coins 5 Following the redesign of the double eagle eagle half eagle and quarter eagle in 1907 and 1908 as well as the penny and nickel redesigns of 1909 and 1913 respectively advocates of replacing the Barber coins began to push for the change when the coins minimum term expired in 1916 As early as 1914 Victor David Brenner designer of the Lincoln cent submitted unsolicited designs for the silver coins He was told in response that Secretary of the Treasury William G McAdoo was completely occupied with other matters 6 On January 2 1915 an interview with Philadelphia Mint Superintendent Adam M Joyce appeared in the Michigan Manufacturer and Financial Record So far as I know there is no thought of issuing new coins of the 50 cent 25 cent and 10 cent values If however a change is made we all hope that more serviceable and satisfactory coins are produced than the recent Saint Gaudens double eagle and eagle and the Pratt half and quarter eagle The buffalo nickel and the Lincoln penny are also faulty from a practical standpoint All resulted from the desire by the government to mint coins to the satisfaction of artists and not practical coiners 7 nbsp Philadelphia Mint Superintendent Adam M Joyce decried the Lincoln cent and other new coinage believing that they struck badly Plaquette by George T Morgan In January 1915 Assistant Secretary of the Treasury William P Malburn sent McAdoo a memorandum about the silver subsidiary coinage noting that the present silver half dollar quarter and dime were changed in 1892 and a new design may therefore be adopted in 1916 This can be done any time in the year 8 In reply McAdoo wrote l et the mint submit designs before we try anyone else on the memorandum 9 In April 1915 Robert W Woolley took office as Mint Director On April 14 he asked Superintendent Joyce to request Chief Engraver Barber then in his 36th year in office to prepare new designs The same day Malburn requested the opinion of the Treasury Department s Solicitor concerning the Mint view that it could strike new designs for the three denominations in 1916 On April 17 the Solicitor s Office responded that the Mint could change the designs 10 At the time the Mint was intensely busy producing the Panama Pacific commemorative coin issue and immediate action was not taken 9 In October Barber was summoned to Washington to discuss coin designs with Woolley though it is uncertain whether or not he had already prepared sketches for the new coinage 10 On December 3 Woolley met with the Commission of Fine Arts Woolley asked the Commission to view sketches produced by the Mint s engraving department Barber was present to explain the coinage process to the Commission members Woolley suggested to the members that if they did not like the Mint s work they should select sculptors to submit designs for the new pieces It was Woolley s intent to have distinct designs for the dime quarter and half dollar previously the three pieces had been near identical 11 The director informed the Commission that as the existing coinage had been in use for 25 years it would have to be changed something which numismatic historian David Lange calls a misinterpretation of the coinage laws 12 The Commission disliked the sketches from the Mint submitted by Barber 13 and selected sculptors Adolph Weinman Hermon MacNeil and Albin Polasek to submit proposals for the new coins The sculptors could submit multiple sketches Although the Mint could decide to use a design on a denomination not intended by its sculptor the designs were not fully interchangeable by statute an eagle had to appear on the reverse of the quarter and half dollar but could not appear on the dime Woolley hoped that each sculptor would be successful with one piece 14 nbsp Mint Director Robert W Woolley seen on his Mint medal designed by Assistant Engraver George T Morgan advocated for the end of the Barber coinage though he may not have understood he did not have to replace them The three sculptors submitted design sketches in mid February and on February 23 met with Woolley in New York so the artists could make presentations of the work to him and answer his questions After discussions between Woolley and McAdoo Weinman was notified on February 28 that five of his sketches had been selected for the dime and half dollar and the reverse of the quarter The same day Woolley wrote to MacNeil to tell him he would sculpt the quarter s obverse and to Polasek to inform him of his lack of success 15 Members of the Commission persuaded Woolley that so much should not be entrusted to a single artist and MacNeil was allowed to design both sides of the quarter subject to his making modifications to his submission 16 On March 3 the new coins were publicly announced with the Treasury noting d esigns of these coins must be changed by law every 25 years and the present 25 year period ends with 1916 17 The press release indicated that the Treasury hoped production of the new coins would begin in about two months once the designs were finalized The same day Woolley wrote to Mint Engraver Barber telling him that his sketches were rejected and that models from Weinman and MacNeil would arrive at the Philadelphia Mint no later than May 1 17 According to numismatic historian Walter Breen Barber became sullen and totally uncooperative 18 Lange notes that numerous delays were encountered as the artists fine tuned their models while simultaneously avoiding obstacles thrown in their path by Barber While his observations regarding many aspects of practical coinage were quite accurate they clearly could have been presented in a more constructive manner 19 In his book on Mercury dimes Lange notes that Barber by then aged 75 had been compelled over the past ten years to participate in the systematic undoing of a lifetime s achievements he had to participate in the process which resulted in coins designed by others replacing ones designed by him 20 With the new pieces all American coins would have had a recent change of design the Morgan dollar was not then being struck 21 According to a column in The Art World magazine later in 1916 Since that day the 19th century much artistic progress has taken place in our coinage Sculptors of reputation have been employed with admirable results And now we are to have a new half dollar and a new dime by Weinman and a new quarter by McNeill sic Altogether in the retrospect it seems an incredible achievement 22 Design edit nbsp Adolph Weinman is widely believed to have used his neighbor Elsie Stevens as the model for the Mercury dime Weinman never disclosed the name of the model for the obverse and no person ever claimed to have been her The winged Liberty is widely believed however to have been based on a 1913 bust Weinman sculpted of Elsie Stevens wife of Wallace Stevens 23 A lawyer and insurance executive Wallace Stevens later became famous as a poet Wallace and Elsie Stevens rented an apartment from Weinman from 1909 to 1916 In a draft of his unpublished autobiography Woolley wrote that Weinman refused to name the model but told him it was the wife of a lawyer who lived above his Manhattan apartment Woolley in a later version omitted the location saying only that Weinman said it was the wife of a lawyer friend Woolley recorded that he was told that the model wore the top of an old pair of stockings to simulate the cap In 1966 Holly Stevens Wallace and Elsie s daughter noted in her edition of her father s letters that Elsie had been the model for Weinman s dime and half dollar 23 Liberty s features also bear a resemblance to the face of Victory in Weinman s 1909 statuary group erected in Baltimore the Union Soldiers and Sailors Monument 24 nbsp Weinman s 1909 statue of Victory in Baltimore s Union Soldiers and Sailors Monument has features said to bear a resemblance to those on the Mercury dime Weinman s dime depicts Liberty with a wreath of tight curls and wearing a traditional pileus or Liberty cap His depiction of the pileus as a winged cap has provoked comparisons with Roman Republic denarii which art historian Cornelius Vermeule considered superficial Weinman wrote that he considered the winged cap to symbolize liberty of thought 25 Vermeule suggests that one reason for the use of wings was that Weinman in common with many in the tradition of Augustus Saint Gaudens under whom Weinman had studied liked the effect of feathers done in relief 25 The reverse depicts a fasces the object carried by lictors who accompanied Roman magistrates on the coin it represents war and justice It is contrasted with a large olive branch symbolizing peace 25 26 According to Breen Weinman s symbolic message in this design was clearly an updated Don t tread on me 18 The fasces is bound both horizontally and diagonally by a leather strap with the loose ends at the bottom 26 The lettering is in Roman style and is made as discreet as possible 25 Weinman s monogram AW appears on the obverse midway between the date and the letter Y in LIBERTY 19 The mintmark is located on the reverse to the right of the first E in ONE DIME 27 Woolley described the design in his 1916 report to the Secretary of the Treasury The design of the dime owing to the smallness of the coin has been held quite simple The obverse shows a head of Liberty with winged cap The head is simple and firm in form the profile forceful The reverse shows a design of the bundle of rods with battle ax known as Fasces and symbolical of unity wherein lies the nation s strength Surrounding the fasces is a full foliaged branch of olive symbolical of peace 28 Preparation edit nbsp A pattern of the 1916 Mercury dime as illustrated in that year s Mint Director s Report Note that the head is further to the right of the coin than on the issued piece and the head covers less of the E Weinman s monogram is also absent For additional detail on the 1916 subsidiary silver coin redesign see Standing Liberty quarter and Walking Liberty half dollar After Weinman s success in the competition he visited the Mint to discuss conversion of his models to finished dies The first time he found Barber absent but had a productive talk with long time Assistant Engraver George T Morgan Other visits followed and on March 29 Woolley wrote to Superintendent Joyce confidentially the sculptors designing the new coins felt that on their last trip Mr Morgan was much more cordial and cooperative than Mr Barber was I realize I am dealing with artistic temperaments at both ends 29 A severe case of tonsillitis delayed Weinman s work and caused him to request an extension of the May 1 deadline On May 29 Woolley wrote Weinman that the designs both for the dime and half dollar were accepted by the Mint 20 As no Barber pieces of any of the three denominations had been struck in 1916 the pent up demand was high On June 24 Woolley wrote to Joyce The dime is all right Please see that working dies for the three mints are made as rapidly as possible in order that the coinage of the new dimes may be begun quickly The demand for these coins is exceedingly great Everyone to whom the coins have been shown here thinks they are beautiful I beg to enjoin you not to pay out any of the new dimes until you have received special instructions from this office 10 Two days later work on dies was stopped when it was decided that the lettering was insufficiently distinct The delay however did not prevent the Mint from authorizing payment to Weinman for his designs 20 On July 15 Woolley resigned as Mint director to work as publicity chairman of the Wilson reelection campaign As the new director Friedrich Johannes Hugo von Engelken did not take office until September 1 1916 Fred H Chaffin became acting director With none of the new designs ready for production and small change in great demand the Mint had no alternative other than to strike Barber dimes and quarters by the million 10 After the lettering problems were addressed Acting Director Chaffin halted production of Barber dimes on August 29 and ordered production of the Mercury dime to begin the following day at the Philadelphia Mint Barber had prepared dies for the Denver and San Francisco mints but they were still in transit Small quantities of the new dime had been sent to vending machine and pay phone manufacturers on September 6 two companies reported problems with the coins AT amp T complained that the new dimes were too thick and would not work in their phones American Sales Machines owned by Clarence W Hobbs whose complaints had delayed the Buffalo nickel requested design changes so that its counterfeit detector could work Von Engelken ordered production of the dimes halted In reality the dime was not too thick but the rim of the coin struck too high a defect known as a fin This had been an ongoing problem as Weinman s design was produced but was thought to have been corrected 30 No dimes had yet been struck at the two western mints Minting of Barber dimes resumed After an article quoting Joyce appeared in the press Von Engelken instructed his staff not to speak to reporters 10 The problems with the dime were a potential embarrassment with a presidential campaign underway McAdoo enquired how much time would be required for another design to be struck he was informed it would take months Instead Weinman prepared modified designs separating the letters of LIBERTY slightly from the rim and lowering the relief McAdoo approved the revised design on September 28 These changes assuaged the concerns of both firms Von Engelken authorized Joyce to produce coinage dies on October 6 and the new coins were put into production The earlier strikes including those reclaimed from the testing companies were melted though one specimen is currently known to exist 31 Release and production name and design controversies edit nbsp The 1916 United States Assay Commission met on February 9 and February 10 1916 to test coins from the previous year to ensure they met specifications Among the members and Mint officials shown were then Mint Director Robert W Woolley standing fourth from left Engraver of the United States Mint at Philadelphia Charles E Barber standing third from left and Philadelphia Mint Superintendent Adam Joyce standing at far right The Mercury dime was released into circulation on October 30 1916 the same day that production of the Barber dime ceased 32 Several newspapers complained that Weinman s monogram was too prominent on the obverse according to The New York Times the Treasury was considering removal 32 On November 4 Weinman enquired of Joyce whether any removal was contemplated he received in reply compliments on his design and Joyce s statement that the Mint was not responsible for what appeared in print Weinman wrote again hoping to make changes to the dime but was told that only an act of Congress could change the design 33 Of the three circulating coins first struck in 1916 the Mercury dime was particularly praised On the first day of circulation quantities sold were limited at banks One Minneapolis newspaper dubbed it the battle ax or golf dime reflecting a lack of knowledge concerning the fasces 34 A letter to the editor in the January 1917 The Numismatist appears to be the first numismatic reference to the coin by the nickname Mercury 35 Lange traced the history of this misnomer This misattribution appeared almost immediately in the popular press as writers imagined that the obviously female Liberty was actually a representation of Mercury messenger to the Roman gods of mythology and quite certainly a male It is popularly known as the Mercury Dime even today despite noble but ill fated attempts by some publications to reverse this error 10 Chief Engraver Barber died on February 18 1917 having served 37 years in office His successor was the 72 year old Morgan who had served under Barber for his entire tenure 36 The dime was struck in substantial numbers until 1930 with the notable exception of the 1916 D issue and from 1921 to 1923 when an economic downturn caused the need for coins to diminish No dimes were struck for 1922 the first time since 1826 that this had occurred With the onset of the Great Depression mintages dropped again in 1930 and 1931 coinage of dimes was suspended entirely in 1932 and 1933 The low mintage dates are not rare today as many were hoarded and 1930 and 1931 dated dimes proved readily available from the banks once the economy improved With the economy beginning to pick up again coinage resumed in 1934 and the dime was struck in large numbers each year through the end of the series 10 37 In the early 1930s with the rise of fascist movements in Europe objections began to be raised in the United States to the presence of fasces the emblem of Mussolini s National Fascist Party on the dime s reverse However defenders of the dime stressed that the fasces were meant as a symbol of unity 38 The death of President Franklin Roosevelt in April 1945 brought immediate calls for a coin to be issued with his image As Roosevelt had been closely associated with the March of Dimes and as the dime s design could be replaced without the need for congressional action as it had been struck for more than 25 years the Treasury chose that denomination to honor Roosevelt Mint Chief Engraver John R Sinnock Morgan s successor executed the design featuring Roosevelt which replaced the Mercury dime in 1946 making 1945 the last year in which it was produced According to Mint Director Nellie Tayloe Ross a total of 2 677 232 488 Mercury dimes were struck 10 Collecting edit nbsp The Mint medal for Director Friedrich Johannes Hugo von Engelken designed by George T Morgan who was then assistant engraver The 1916 D Mercury dime struck at the Denver Mint is the key date of the series with a mintage of 264 000 pieces 10 The low mintage is because in November 1916 von Engelken informed the three mint superintendents of a large order for quarters and instructed that Denver strike only quarters until it was filled Striking of dimes at Denver did not resume until well into 1917 making the 1917 D relatively rare as well 39 Few varieties are known in the Mercury dime series 40 The 1942 41 is generally termed an overdate it is actually a doubled die error the obverse die from which the coins were struck took one impression from a 1942 dated hub and one from a 1941 dated hub until the 1990s dies required two strikes from a hub for the design to be fully impressed Sinnock stated that the pieces were most likely struck in late 1941 when preparation of the 1942 dies was under way 41 Also produced at that time though less apparent to the naked eye was the 1942 1 D Another popular variety is the 1945 S Micro S with a smaller than normal mintmark This variety was caused by the Mint s wartime use of a puncheon used to impress mintmarks on dies and hubs which had been made for use with early 20th century Philippine coinage struck at San Francisco which had only a small space for the mintmark 42 Beginning in 1928 coin albums were issued by private publishers mostly in folder form which were widely used to collect the pieces This led to a great increase in interest in collecting current coinage by date and mintmark 41 Many Mercury dimes were not fully struck meaning that design detail was lost even before the coins entered circulation Exceptionally well struck dimes display full bands that is the horizontal bands on the fasces show full detail In circulation the reverse tended to more readily display wear due to a lower rim in relation to the relief of the design Most well circulated dimes show more wear to the reverse 43 Although no 1923 or 1930 dimes were struck at Denver specimens appearing to be 1923 D or 1930 D dimes may be encountered These counterfeits are struck in good silver allowing the coiner to profit on the difference between the cost of production and the face value They did not appear until after World War II are invariably found in worn condition and are believed to have been struck in the Soviet Union a country known to have counterfeited US coins during World War II 44 Project Mercury edit Several Mercury dimes were flown into space on July 21 1961 on the Mercury Redstone 4 sub orbital mission the second manned flight of Project Mercury and the second human space flight by the United States The coins sank with the capsule in the Atlantic Ocean but were later recovered with the capsule from a depth of nearly 16 000 ft 4 900 m in 1999 45 46 2016 centennial gold version edit nbsp 2016 W Gold Mercury dimeThe Mint released a centennial version in gold of the Mercury dime on April 21 2016 sold through the Mint s official website Demand was so high that orders were no longer able to be placed within 45 minutes of the coin becoming available 47 48 49 On April 26 the Mint reported that it had sold 122 510 units just 2 490 pieces away from the item s maximum allowable mintage 50 The remainder which included about as many as 8 000 to 9 000 coins that were unsold or returned to the mint from prior sales were offered for sale on December 15 2016 with a limit of one per customer and sold out within 90 minutes 51 References edit nbsp Money portal nbsp Numismatics portal nbsp United States portal Richardson 1891 pp 806 807 26 Stat L 484 amendment to R S 3510 Breen 1988 pp 572 573 a b Lange 2006 p 134 Lange 2006 p 136 Burdette 2005 p 12 Burdette 2005 p 13 Michigan Manufacturing and Financial Journal January 2 1915 Burdette 2005 pp 13 14 a b Burdette 2005 p 14 a b c d e f g h i Lange History of the Mercury dimes Burdette 2005 pp 14 15 Lange 1993 p 3 Burdette 2005 p 16 Burdette 2005 pp 19 20 Burdette 2005 pp 22 23 Burdette 2005 pp 26 27 a b Lange 1993 pp 4 5 a b Breen 1988 p 326 a b Lange 2006 p 150 a b c Lange 1993 p 4 Vermeule 1971 p 139 The Art World a b Burdette 2005 p 172 Burdette 2005 p 173 a b c d Vermeule 1971 p 145 a b Lange October 2012 p 42 Breen 1988 p 327 Woolley 1916 p 8 Taxay 1983 pp 347 348 Burdette 2005 pp 60 61 Burdette 2005 pp 62 65 105 a b Burdette 2005 p 65 Burdette 2005 p 66 Burdette 2005 p 93 Burdette 2005 p 94 Burdette 2005 p 178 Lange October 2012 Romm James 23 November 2023 Authoritarianism s Emblem The New York Review of Books Vol LXX no 18 p 48 Retrieved 16 November 2023 Lange October 2012 pp 42 43 Lange Mercury dimes 1942 41 a b Lange Mercury dimes Collecting Lange Mercury dimes 1945 S Micro S Lange Mercury dimes Grading Lange Mercury dimes Counterfeit amp Altered Coins Ocean News amp Technology Technology Systems Corporation Joseph A Angelo May 14 2014 Human Spaceflight Infobase Publishing pp 87 ISBN 978 1 4381 0891 9 Mint News Blog April 20 2016 2016 Mercury Dime Centennial Gold Coin Updated US Mint News Blog Archived from the original on April 26 2016 Retrieved April 28 2016 CoinWeek News Staff April 21 2016 U S Mint Sells Out Current Stock of 2016 Mercury Dime Centennial Gold Coin CoinWeek Longwood FL Retrieved April 28 2016 Harper Dave April 22 2016 Nostalgia goes for the gold Numismatic News Palm Coast FL Retrieved April 28 2016 Holmes Dan April 25 2016 2016 Mercury Dime Centennial Gold Coin Unofficial Sales Total Updated US Mint News Blog Archived from the original on April 29 2016 Retrieved April 28 2016 Joe O Donnell December 15 2016 The gold Mercury dimes released Thursday are already sold out Coin World Retrieved December 31 2016 Bibliography Breen Walter 1988 Walter Breen s Complete Encyclopedia of U S and Colonial Coins New York N Y Doubleday ISBN 978 0 385 14207 6 Burdette Roger W 2005 Renaissance of American Coinage 1916 1921 Great Falls Va Seneca Mill Press LLC ISBN 978 0 9768986 0 3 Lange David W 1993 A Complete Guide Book to Mercury Dimes Virginia Beach Va DLRC Press ISBN 978 1 880731 17 8 Lange David W 2006 History of the United States Mint and its Coinage Atlanta Ga Whitman Publishing LLC ISBN 978 0 7948 1972 9 Richardson William Allen ed 1891 Supplement to the revised statutes of the United States Vol 1 Washington D C US Government Printing Office Retrieved February 13 2012 Taxay Don 1983 1966 The U S Mint and Coinage reprint ed New York N Y Sanford J Durst Numismatic Publications ISBN 978 0 915262 68 7 Vermeule Cornelius 1971 Numismatic Art in America Cambridge Mass The Belknap Press of Harvard University Press ISBN 978 0 674 62840 3 Other sources The Administration and its Attitude to Art The Coinage The Art World 1 1 New York The Kalon Publishing Company Inc 19 20 74 October 1916 JSTOR 25587646 Carter Frank E January 2 1915 Don t want coin designs changed Michigan Manufacturing and Financial Journal Detroit Mich Manufacturers Publishing Company 16 Retrieved October 20 2011 adam m joyce superintendent Lange David January 9 2005 Mercury dimes Chapter 1 History of the Mercury dimes DLRC Press Archived from the original on August 12 2012 Retrieved September 16 2012 Lange David January 9 2005 Mercury dimes Chapter 3 Collecting DLRC Press Archived from the original on April 25 2012 Retrieved February 13 2012 Lange David January 9 2005 Mercury dimes Chapter 4 Counterfeit amp Altered Coins DLRC Press Archived from the original on January 20 2012 Retrieved February 13 2012 Lange David January 9 2005 Mercury dimes Chapter 5 Grading DLRC Press Archived from the original on January 19 2012 Retrieved February 13 2012 Lange David January 9 2005 Mercury dimes Chapter 6 1942 41 DLRC Press Archived from the original on April 25 2012 Retrieved February 13 2012 Lange David January 9 2005 Mercury dimes Chapter 6 1945 S Micro S DLRC Press Archived from the original on August 14 2012 Retrieved February 13 2012 Lange David October 2012 Collecting Mercury dimes The Numismatist Colorado Springs Co American Numismatic Association 40 46 Woolley Robert W 1916 Annual Report of the Director of the Mint for the Fiscal Year Ended June 30 1916 Washington D C US Government Printing Office p 8 Archived from the original on April 15 2013 Retrieved February 13 2012 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Mercury dime amp oldid 1185401901, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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