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United States Sesquicentennial coinage

The United States Sesquicentennial coin issue consisted of a commemorative half dollar and quarter eagle (gold $2.50 piece) struck in 1926 at the Philadelphia Mint for the 150th anniversary of American independence. The obverse of the half dollar features portraits of the first president, George Washington, and the president in 1926, Calvin Coolidge, making it the only American coin to depict a president in his lifetime.[a]

Sesquicentennial half dollar
Value50 cents (0.50 US dollars)
Mass12.50 g
Diameter30.6 mm
Thickness1.8 mm
Edgereeded
Composition
  • 90 % silver
  • 10 % copper
Silver0.36169 troy oz
Years of minting1926
Mint marksNone. All pieces struck at Philadelphia Mint without mint mark.
Obverse
DesignJugate heads of George Washington and Calvin Coolidge
DesignerModeled by John R. Sinnock from designs by John Frederick Lewis
Design date1926
Reverse
DesignThe Liberty Bell
DesignerModeled by John R. Sinnock from designs by John Frederick Lewis
Design date1926
Sesquicentennial quarter eagle ($2.50)
United States
Value2.5 United States dollars
Mass4.18 g
Diameter18 mm
Edgereeded
Composition.900 gold, .100 copper
Gold.12094 troy oz
Years of minting1926
Mint marksNone. All pieces struck at Philadelphia Mint without mint mark.
Obverse
DesignLiberty, bearing a scroll representing the United States Declaration of Independence and a torch
DesignerJohn R. Sinnock
Design date1926
Reverse
DesignIndependence Hall, with a rising Sun behind it
DesignerJohn R. Sinnock
Design date1926

By the March 1925 Act of Congress, by which the National Sesquicentennial Exhibition Commission was chartered, Congress also allowed it to purchase 1,000,000 specially designed half dollars and 200,000 quarter eagles, which could be sold to the public at a premium. The Commission had trouble agreeing on a design with Mint Chief Engraver John R. Sinnock, and asked Philadelphia attorney, arts patron and numismatist John Frederick Lewis (1860–1932) to submit sketches.[1] These were adapted by Sinnock, without giving credit to Lewis, whose involvement would not be generally known for forty years.

Both the quarter eagle, designed by Sinnock, and the half dollar were struck in the maximum number authorized, but many were returned to the Mint for melting when they failed to sell. The Liberty Bell reverse for the half dollar was later reused by Sinnock, again without giving Lewis credit, on the Chief Engraver's Franklin half dollar, which was first minted in 1948.

Inception edit

Legislation for a commemorative coin to mark the 150th anniversary of American independence was introduced on behalf of the United States National Sesquicentennial Exhibition Commission, which was charged with organizing what became known as the Sesquicentennial Exposition in Philadelphia. In the Act of March 3, 1925, Congress both chartered the Commission and allowed one million half dollars and 200,000 quarter eagles to be struck in commemoration of the Sesquicentennial of American Independence. These coins would be sold only to the Commission, at face value; it could then retail them to the public at a premium.[2] Profits would go to financing the Exposition.[3]

The original version of the bill, introduced in the House of Representatives on February 16, 1925 by Pennsylvania Congressman George P. Darrow and in the Senate by that state's George W. Pepper, called for a $1.50 gold coin for the 150th anniversary, for commemorative half dollars, and for a $1 bill honoring the Declaration of Independence.[4][5] A hearing was held before the House Committee on Industrial Arts and Expositions two days later, at which Congressman Darrow predicted that the $1.50 gold pieces would not be opposed by either the Treasury or the Committee on Coinage, Weights, and Measures,[6] but he was incorrect; Treasury Secretary Andrew W. Mellon would not support them.[7] The Commission also hoped to have commemoratives depicting the enlargement of the country through acquisitions such as the Louisiana Purchase and the Annexation of Texas, but these were not included in the final version of the bill.[8] Nevertheless, the Commission continued to pursue congressional approval of the $1.50 piece and the other proposed commemoratives at least through August 1925.[9]

In May, H. P. Caemmerer, secretary of the Commission of Fine Arts, a body charged with making recommendations on the approval of coinage design, wrote to the Sesquicentennial Commission, asking what they proposed to do about the coins. Having received no reply, he wrote again in late August, this time to Milton Medary, a member of the Fine Arts Commission, asking what progress had been made. Medary replied that the Sesquicentennial Commission was in touch with the new Chief Engraver at the Philadelphia Mint, John R. Sinnock (his predecessor, George T. Morgan, had died in January), but that Sinnock had not yet submitted satisfactory designs.[10]

Apparently dissatisfied with Sinnock's work, the Sesquicentennial Commission hired John Frederick Lewis to create designs.[10] Lewis, who served as president of the Pennsylvania Academy of Fine Arts from 1906 until his death in 1932,[11] was known as a numismatist, but not as an artist.[12][13] On December 8, 1925, Sesquicentennial Commission director Asher C. Baker submitted Lewis's sketches, which appear much like the present half dollar, to Fine Arts Commission chairman Charles Moore. Baker referred to Lewis's "designs for the coins", which may mean that he submitted sketches for the quarter eagle as well, but if so, they are not extant and were not acted upon by the Fine Arts Commission.[14] The half dollar designs were approved by the Fine Arts Commission, on condition the sketches were converted into models by a competent sculptor, and Moore sent them on December 11 to Mint Director Robert J. Grant. The resultant plaster models, made by Sinnock, were submitted to the Fine Arts Commission on March 13, 1926, and were undoubtedly endorsed, but the approval letter is lost.[14]

Sinnock's sketches for the quarter eagle were sent to the Fine Arts Commission on February 27, 1926, and were forwarded to sculptor member Lorado Taft for his views. Moore sent his commission's approval to Grant on March 26, with several recommendations, including that the motto E Pluribus Unum, present on the obverse in Sinnock's sketches, and the sun's rays on the reverse, be omitted. The rays were not removed, and the motto was moved to the reverse. Approval of the models followed in April, again with minor suggestions.[15]

Design edit

The obverse of the half dollar features jugate busts of George Washington, first president of the United States, and Calvin Coolidge, the president in 1926. According to Anthony Swiatek and Walter Breen, "both were mistakes. Washington was not president of the Continental Congress in 1776, and Coolidge's likeness was illegal. By an 1866 Act of Congress, no living person could be portrayed on U.S. coins or currency; but this law had been many times violated and would be again."[16] Although Sinnock had not previously designed a coin showing a president, he had created presidential medals under Chief Engraver Morgan's direction.[17] Other living Americans, including Virginia Senator Carter Glass, have appeared on commemorative coinage, but Coolidge is the only president to appear on a U.S. coin in his lifetime. The Liberty Bell appears on the reverse, making the Sesquicentennial half dollar the first U.S. coin to bear private advertising—that is, the legend "Pass and Stow" on the bell, for the long-defunct partnership of John Pass and John Stow, who recast the bell after it initially broke in 1752.[18][19] Sinnock's initials JRS are on the obverse, on the truncation of Washington's bust.[20]

 
The Bicentennial half dollar resembles the earlier quarter eagle.

Swiatek and Breen describe the obverse of the quarter eagle as "very Art Deco".[16] Liberty appears on it, wearing a liberty cap and holding both a scroll representing the United States Declaration of Independence and a torch likely intended to recall the Statue of Liberty. The reverse depicts Independence Hall, where the Declaration was signed, and the rising Sun behind it. Sinnock's initials are to the right, above the right wing of the building.[21] Bowers pointed out that the depiction of Independence Hall closely resembles that on the Bicentennial half dollar, struck a half century later.[22] As no clock hands are seen on the bell tower of the building on the quarter eagle, it is not possible to say what time is intended—on the Bicentennial half dollar, the time is 3:00.[23]

At the insistence of the Sesquicentennial Commission, the coins were minted in very shallow relief, and thus struck up poorly.[12] Coin dealer and numismatic author Q. David Bowers opined, "from the standpoint of aesthetic appeal the [half dollar] is at the bottom of the popularity charts along with the 1923-S Monroe half dollar".[24]

Art historian Cornelius Vermeule took a more positive view of the two coins. Commenting on the half dollar obverse, he praised its technical aspects, showing the Mint had learned something from earlier attempts at coin redesign. He admired the reverse, calling the bell and the lettering "jewels of precision".[25] For the quarter eagle obverse, with its figure of a robed Liberty standing on a globe, Vermeule suggested that Sinnock "revert[ed] in part to the allegorical iconography of the nineteenth century."[25] He felt that the Liberty allegory is too blatant, with scroll and torch, and noted that Sinnock eventually found a more proper place for his torch on the Roosevelt dime (1946).[26] The figure itself, despite classical robes, "looks more like a 'flapper' of the 1920s. Her cloth cap accentuates this," according to Vermeule.[26] The reverse, in Vermeule's view, was part of a tradition of realistic views of structures on U.S coins that would repeat itself with the Jefferson nickel (1938).[27]

Distribution and aftermath edit

 
 
Sinnock's later Franklin half dollar reproduces the Liberty Bell from the commemorative half; his Roosevelt dime evokes the torch from the quarter eagle.

The first Sesquicentennial half dollar was coined by Philadelphia Mayor W. Freeland Kendrick at a special ceremony at that city's mint on May 19, 1926. It was presented to President Coolidge when he visited the Exposition[28] and today rests in the Calvin Coolidge Presidential Library and Museum.[13] Lewis, in a May 5 letter to Mint Director Grant, had indicated his (mistaken) understanding that a mark was placed on the first 1,000 coins struck to distinguish them and proposed that it be "K" for Kendrick; this was not done.[13]

The Philadelphia Mint coined 1,000,528 of the half dollars at the behest of the Commission in May and June 1926, with the excess over the authorized mintage reserved for inspection and testing at the 1927 meeting of the United States Assay Commission.[29] They also had the mint strike 200,226 quarter eagles in May and June, with the excess also set aside for the Assay Commission. The gold piece was the second quarter eagle to be a commemorative, after the Panama–Pacific issue of 1915. No further gold commemoratives, of any denomination, would be issued by the Mint Bureau until 1984, when a $10 piece was issued for the Los Angeles Olympics.[30]

The Sesquicentennial Exposition opened in Philadelphia on June 1, 1926, financed in part by $5 million in bonds floated by the city. Work had not been completed on many of the exhibits and construction continued to the close of the fair. Nevertheless, there were many scientific, artistic, and commercial displays. Most firms that exhibited lost money by their participation, as did the city, and according to Bowers, "in the annals of fairs and expositions in the United States, the Sesquicentennial event earns a low rating."[12]

Sales of coins at the Exposition were handled by the Commission; those by mail were dealt with by the Franklin Trust Company. The half dollar was priced at $1, and the quarter eagle at $4; however they did not sell well and the Commission's belief it could sell the entire mintage proved wildly optimistic. Although six million people visited the Exposition, 859,408 of the 1,000,000 half dollars were returned to the mint for melting. Similarly, 154,207 quarter eagles of the mintage of 200,000 were returned for melting.[28] This did not take place all at once: 420,000 half dollars had been returned by January 1930, with the rest later.[31] According to coin dealer B. Max Mehl in his 1937 volume on commemoratives, "Philadelphia with a population of over 2,000,000 people ... could and should have sold a greater number of coins".[32] Arlie R. Slabaugh wrote in his 1975 book on the same subject, "we have been called complacent about our independence and the American way of life in recent years—judging by the sale of these coins, it must have been much worse in 1926!"[33]

Sinnock reused the reverse for the Franklin half dollar, first struck in 1948, the year after his death. Mint and other publications gave credit for both coins' designs only to Sinnock until Don Taxay published his An Illustrated History of U.S. Commemorative Coinage in 1967, disclosing Lewis's involvement.[12] Taxay referred to "the Mint's ... final, deliberate misattribution of the artist who designed the half dollar"[10] and wrote, "perhaps after these forty years, it is time for a new credit line".[34] Bowers noted, "Lewis and Sinnock should share the credit."[12] R. S. Yeoman's A Guide Book of United States Coins (2015 edition) notes the involvement of both men, and values the half dollar at $90, with the quarter eagle beginning at around $450, though higher-graded coins may sell for more.[35] Many specimens of both coins are known in circulated condition.[13]

Notes edit

  1. ^ While Coolidge may have been the only living president on an American coin, he was not the only living person. Thomas Kilby appeared on the Alabama Centennial half dollar in 1921, and in 1936, Joseph Taylor Robinson appeared on the Arkansas-Robinson half dollar and Carter Glass appeared on the Lynchburg Sesquicentennial half dollar.

References and bibliography edit

  1. ^ Brief biographical entry for John Frederick Lewis at pcgs.com (excerpted from Q. David Bowers, 1992. Commemorative Coins of the United States: A Complete Encyclopedia)
  2. ^ Flynn, pp. 350–351.
  3. ^ Flynn, p. 223.
  4. ^ "H. J. Res. 357". United States House of Representatives. February 16, 1925.(subscription required)
  5. ^ "S. J. Res. 187". United States Senate. February 16, 1925.(subscription required)
  6. ^ "Hearings of the Committee on Industrial Arts and Expositions on H. J. Res. 357". United States House of Representatives. February 18, 1925. pp. 9–10.(subscription required)
  7. ^ Slabaugh, p. 76.
  8. ^ Bowers, pp. 225–226.
  9. ^ Taxay, pp. 111–112.
  10. ^ a b c Taxay, p. 111.
  11. ^ Goodyear, Frank H. Jr. "A History of the Pennsylvania Academy of the Fine Arts, 1805-1976 (Resource Library, July 16, 2008)
  12. ^ a b c d e Bowers, p. 226.
  13. ^ a b c d Flynn, p. 169.
  14. ^ a b Taxay, p. 112.
  15. ^ Taxay, pp. 112, 117.
  16. ^ a b Swiatek & Breen, p. 221.
  17. ^ Vermeule, p. 171.
  18. ^ Swiatek, pp. 186–187.
  19. ^ Flynn, p. 168.
  20. ^ Swiatek, p. 186.
  21. ^ Swiatek & Breen, pp. 221–222.
  22. ^ Bowers, p. 643.
  23. ^ Swiatek, p. 192.
  24. ^ Bowers, p. 227.
  25. ^ a b Vermeule, p. 172.
  26. ^ a b Vermeule, p. 173.
  27. ^ Vermeule, pp. 172–173.
  28. ^ a b Swiatek, p. 187.
  29. ^ Bowers, pp. 226, 228.
  30. ^ Bowers, pp. 644–645.
  31. ^ Bowers, p. 227 n.1.
  32. ^ Mehl, p. 21.
  33. ^ Slabaugh, p. 73.
  34. ^ Taxay, p. 117.
  35. ^ Yeoman, pp. 294–295.

Books

  • Bowers, Q. David (1992). Commemorative Coins of the United States: A Complete Encyclopedia. Wolfeboro, NH: Bowers and Merena Galleries, Inc.
  • Flynn, Kevin (2008). The Authoritative Reference on Commemorative Coins 1892–1954. Roswell, GA: Kyle Vick. OCLC 711779330.
  • Mehl, B. Max (1937). The Commemorative Coinage of the United States. Fort Worth, TX: B. Max Mehl.
  • Slabaugh, Arlie R. (1975). United States Commemorative Coinage (second ed.). Racine, WI: Whitman Publishing (then a division of Western Publishing Company, Inc.). ISBN 978-0-307-09377-6.
  • Swiatek, Anthony (2012). Encyclopedia of the Commemorative Coins of the United States. Chicago: KWS Publishers. ISBN 978-0-9817736-7-4.
  • Swiatek, Anthony; Breen, Walter (1981). The Encyclopedia of United States Silver & Gold Commemorative Coins, 1892 to 1954. New York: Arco Publishing. ISBN 978-0-668-04765-4.
  • Taxay, Don (1967). An Illustrated History of U.S. Commemorative Coinage. New York: Arco Publishing. ISBN 978-0-668-01536-3.
  • Vermeule, Cornelius (1971). Numismatic Art in America. Cambridge, MA: The Belknap Press of Harvard University Press. ISBN 978-0-674-62840-3.
  • Yeoman, R.S. (2014). A Guide Book of United States Coins 2015 (68th ed.). Atlanta, GA: Whitman Publishing LLC. ISBN 978-0-7948-4180-5.
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united, states, sesquicentennial, coinage, united, states, sesquicentennial, coin, issue, consisted, commemorative, half, dollar, quarter, eagle, gold, piece, struck, 1926, philadelphia, mint, 150th, anniversary, american, independence, obverse, half, dollar, . The United States Sesquicentennial coin issue consisted of a commemorative half dollar and quarter eagle gold 2 50 piece struck in 1926 at the Philadelphia Mint for the 150th anniversary of American independence The obverse of the half dollar features portraits of the first president George Washington and the president in 1926 Calvin Coolidge making it the only American coin to depict a president in his lifetime a Sesquicentennial half dollarValue50 cents 0 50 US dollars Mass12 50 gDiameter30 6 mmThickness1 8 mmEdgereededComposition90 silver 10 copperSilver0 36169 troy ozYears of minting1926Mint marksNone All pieces struck at Philadelphia Mint without mint mark ObverseDesignJugate heads of George Washington and Calvin CoolidgeDesignerModeled by John R Sinnock from designs by John Frederick LewisDesign date1926ReverseDesignThe Liberty BellDesignerModeled by John R Sinnock from designs by John Frederick LewisDesign date1926Sesquicentennial quarter eagle 2 50 United StatesValue2 5 United States dollarsMass4 18 gDiameter18 mmEdgereededComposition 900 gold 100 copperGold 12094 troy ozYears of minting1926Mint marksNone All pieces struck at Philadelphia Mint without mint mark ObverseDesignLiberty bearing a scroll representing the United States Declaration of Independence and a torchDesignerJohn R SinnockDesign date1926ReverseDesignIndependence Hall with a rising Sun behind itDesignerJohn R SinnockDesign date1926By the March 1925 Act of Congress by which the National Sesquicentennial Exhibition Commission was chartered Congress also allowed it to purchase 1 000 000 specially designed half dollars and 200 000 quarter eagles which could be sold to the public at a premium The Commission had trouble agreeing on a design with Mint Chief Engraver John R Sinnock and asked Philadelphia attorney arts patron and numismatist John Frederick Lewis 1860 1932 to submit sketches 1 These were adapted by Sinnock without giving credit to Lewis whose involvement would not be generally known for forty years Both the quarter eagle designed by Sinnock and the half dollar were struck in the maximum number authorized but many were returned to the Mint for melting when they failed to sell The Liberty Bell reverse for the half dollar was later reused by Sinnock again without giving Lewis credit on the Chief Engraver s Franklin half dollar which was first minted in 1948 Contents 1 Inception 2 Design 3 Distribution and aftermath 4 Notes 5 References and bibliographyInception editLegislation for a commemorative coin to mark the 150th anniversary of American independence was introduced on behalf of the United States National Sesquicentennial Exhibition Commission which was charged with organizing what became known as the Sesquicentennial Exposition in Philadelphia In the Act of March 3 1925 Congress both chartered the Commission and allowed one million half dollars and 200 000 quarter eagles to be struck in commemoration of the Sesquicentennial of American Independence These coins would be sold only to the Commission at face value it could then retail them to the public at a premium 2 Profits would go to financing the Exposition 3 The original version of the bill introduced in the House of Representatives on February 16 1925 by Pennsylvania Congressman George P Darrow and in the Senate by that state s George W Pepper called for a 1 50 gold coin for the 150th anniversary for commemorative half dollars and for a 1 bill honoring the Declaration of Independence 4 5 A hearing was held before the House Committee on Industrial Arts and Expositions two days later at which Congressman Darrow predicted that the 1 50 gold pieces would not be opposed by either the Treasury or the Committee on Coinage Weights and Measures 6 but he was incorrect Treasury Secretary Andrew W Mellon would not support them 7 The Commission also hoped to have commemoratives depicting the enlargement of the country through acquisitions such as the Louisiana Purchase and the Annexation of Texas but these were not included in the final version of the bill 8 Nevertheless the Commission continued to pursue congressional approval of the 1 50 piece and the other proposed commemoratives at least through August 1925 9 In May H P Caemmerer secretary of the Commission of Fine Arts a body charged with making recommendations on the approval of coinage design wrote to the Sesquicentennial Commission asking what they proposed to do about the coins Having received no reply he wrote again in late August this time to Milton Medary a member of the Fine Arts Commission asking what progress had been made Medary replied that the Sesquicentennial Commission was in touch with the new Chief Engraver at the Philadelphia Mint John R Sinnock his predecessor George T Morgan had died in January but that Sinnock had not yet submitted satisfactory designs 10 Apparently dissatisfied with Sinnock s work the Sesquicentennial Commission hired John Frederick Lewis to create designs 10 Lewis who served as president of the Pennsylvania Academy of Fine Arts from 1906 until his death in 1932 11 was known as a numismatist but not as an artist 12 13 On December 8 1925 Sesquicentennial Commission director Asher C Baker submitted Lewis s sketches which appear much like the present half dollar to Fine Arts Commission chairman Charles Moore Baker referred to Lewis s designs for the coins which may mean that he submitted sketches for the quarter eagle as well but if so they are not extant and were not acted upon by the Fine Arts Commission 14 The half dollar designs were approved by the Fine Arts Commission on condition the sketches were converted into models by a competent sculptor and Moore sent them on December 11 to Mint Director Robert J Grant The resultant plaster models made by Sinnock were submitted to the Fine Arts Commission on March 13 1926 and were undoubtedly endorsed but the approval letter is lost 14 Sinnock s sketches for the quarter eagle were sent to the Fine Arts Commission on February 27 1926 and were forwarded to sculptor member Lorado Taft for his views Moore sent his commission s approval to Grant on March 26 with several recommendations including that the motto E Pluribus Unum present on the obverse in Sinnock s sketches and the sun s rays on the reverse be omitted The rays were not removed and the motto was moved to the reverse Approval of the models followed in April again with minor suggestions 15 Design editThe obverse of the half dollar features jugate busts of George Washington first president of the United States and Calvin Coolidge the president in 1926 According to Anthony Swiatek and Walter Breen both were mistakes Washington was not president of the Continental Congress in 1776 and Coolidge s likeness was illegal By an 1866 Act of Congress no living person could be portrayed on U S coins or currency but this law had been many times violated and would be again 16 Although Sinnock had not previously designed a coin showing a president he had created presidential medals under Chief Engraver Morgan s direction 17 Other living Americans including Virginia Senator Carter Glass have appeared on commemorative coinage but Coolidge is the only president to appear on a U S coin in his lifetime The Liberty Bell appears on the reverse making the Sesquicentennial half dollar the first U S coin to bear private advertising that is the legend Pass and Stow on the bell for the long defunct partnership of John Pass and John Stow who recast the bell after it initially broke in 1752 18 19 Sinnock s initials JRS are on the obverse on the truncation of Washington s bust 20 nbsp The Bicentennial half dollar resembles the earlier quarter eagle Swiatek and Breen describe the obverse of the quarter eagle as very Art Deco 16 Liberty appears on it wearing a liberty cap and holding both a scroll representing the United States Declaration of Independence and a torch likely intended to recall the Statue of Liberty The reverse depicts Independence Hall where the Declaration was signed and the rising Sun behind it Sinnock s initials are to the right above the right wing of the building 21 Bowers pointed out that the depiction of Independence Hall closely resembles that on the Bicentennial half dollar struck a half century later 22 As no clock hands are seen on the bell tower of the building on the quarter eagle it is not possible to say what time is intended on the Bicentennial half dollar the time is 3 00 23 At the insistence of the Sesquicentennial Commission the coins were minted in very shallow relief and thus struck up poorly 12 Coin dealer and numismatic author Q David Bowers opined from the standpoint of aesthetic appeal the half dollar is at the bottom of the popularity charts along with the 1923 S Monroe half dollar 24 Art historian Cornelius Vermeule took a more positive view of the two coins Commenting on the half dollar obverse he praised its technical aspects showing the Mint had learned something from earlier attempts at coin redesign He admired the reverse calling the bell and the lettering jewels of precision 25 For the quarter eagle obverse with its figure of a robed Liberty standing on a globe Vermeule suggested that Sinnock revert ed in part to the allegorical iconography of the nineteenth century 25 He felt that the Liberty allegory is too blatant with scroll and torch and noted that Sinnock eventually found a more proper place for his torch on the Roosevelt dime 1946 26 The figure itself despite classical robes looks more like a flapper of the 1920s Her cloth cap accentuates this according to Vermeule 26 The reverse in Vermeule s view was part of a tradition of realistic views of structures on U S coins that would repeat itself with the Jefferson nickel 1938 27 Distribution and aftermath edit nbsp nbsp Sinnock s later Franklin half dollar reproduces the Liberty Bell from the commemorative half his Roosevelt dime evokes the torch from the quarter eagle The first Sesquicentennial half dollar was coined by Philadelphia Mayor W Freeland Kendrick at a special ceremony at that city s mint on May 19 1926 It was presented to President Coolidge when he visited the Exposition 28 and today rests in the Calvin Coolidge Presidential Library and Museum 13 Lewis in a May 5 letter to Mint Director Grant had indicated his mistaken understanding that a mark was placed on the first 1 000 coins struck to distinguish them and proposed that it be K for Kendrick this was not done 13 The Philadelphia Mint coined 1 000 528 of the half dollars at the behest of the Commission in May and June 1926 with the excess over the authorized mintage reserved for inspection and testing at the 1927 meeting of the United States Assay Commission 29 They also had the mint strike 200 226 quarter eagles in May and June with the excess also set aside for the Assay Commission The gold piece was the second quarter eagle to be a commemorative after the Panama Pacific issue of 1915 No further gold commemoratives of any denomination would be issued by the Mint Bureau until 1984 when a 10 piece was issued for the Los Angeles Olympics 30 The Sesquicentennial Exposition opened in Philadelphia on June 1 1926 financed in part by 5 million in bonds floated by the city Work had not been completed on many of the exhibits and construction continued to the close of the fair Nevertheless there were many scientific artistic and commercial displays Most firms that exhibited lost money by their participation as did the city and according to Bowers in the annals of fairs and expositions in the United States the Sesquicentennial event earns a low rating 12 Sales of coins at the Exposition were handled by the Commission those by mail were dealt with by the Franklin Trust Company The half dollar was priced at 1 and the quarter eagle at 4 however they did not sell well and the Commission s belief it could sell the entire mintage proved wildly optimistic Although six million people visited the Exposition 859 408 of the 1 000 000 half dollars were returned to the mint for melting Similarly 154 207 quarter eagles of the mintage of 200 000 were returned for melting 28 This did not take place all at once 420 000 half dollars had been returned by January 1930 with the rest later 31 According to coin dealer B Max Mehl in his 1937 volume on commemoratives Philadelphia with a population of over 2 000 000 people could and should have sold a greater number of coins 32 Arlie R Slabaugh wrote in his 1975 book on the same subject we have been called complacent about our independence and the American way of life in recent years judging by the sale of these coins it must have been much worse in 1926 33 Sinnock reused the reverse for the Franklin half dollar first struck in 1948 the year after his death Mint and other publications gave credit for both coins designs only to Sinnock until Don Taxay published his An Illustrated History of U S Commemorative Coinage in 1967 disclosing Lewis s involvement 12 Taxay referred to the Mint s final deliberate misattribution of the artist who designed the half dollar 10 and wrote perhaps after these forty years it is time for a new credit line 34 Bowers noted Lewis and Sinnock should share the credit 12 R S Yeoman s A Guide Book of United States Coins 2015 edition notes the involvement of both men and values the half dollar at 90 with the quarter eagle beginning at around 450 though higher graded coins may sell for more 35 Many specimens of both coins are known in circulated condition 13 Notes edit While Coolidge may have been the only living president on an American coin he was not the only living person Thomas Kilby appeared on the Alabama Centennial half dollar in 1921 and in 1936 Joseph Taylor Robinson appeared on the Arkansas Robinson half dollar and Carter Glass appeared on the Lynchburg Sesquicentennial half dollar References and bibliography edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to United States Sesquicentennial coinage nbsp Money portal nbsp Numismatics portal Brief biographical entry for John Frederick Lewis at pcgs com excerpted from Q David Bowers 1992 Commemorative Coins of the United States A Complete Encyclopedia Flynn pp 350 351 Flynn p 223 H J Res 357 United States House of Representatives February 16 1925 subscription required S J Res 187 United States Senate February 16 1925 subscription required Hearings of the Committee on Industrial Arts and Expositions on H J Res 357 United States House of Representatives February 18 1925 pp 9 10 subscription required Slabaugh p 76 Bowers pp 225 226 Taxay pp 111 112 a b c Taxay p 111 Goodyear Frank H Jr A History of the Pennsylvania Academy of the Fine Arts 1805 1976 Resource Library July 16 2008 a b c d e Bowers p 226 a b c d Flynn p 169 a b Taxay p 112 Taxay pp 112 117 a b Swiatek amp Breen p 221 Vermeule p 171 Swiatek pp 186 187 Flynn p 168 Swiatek p 186 Swiatek amp Breen pp 221 222 Bowers p 643 Swiatek p 192 Bowers p 227 a b Vermeule p 172 a b Vermeule p 173 Vermeule pp 172 173 a b Swiatek p 187 Bowers pp 226 228 Bowers pp 644 645 Bowers p 227 n 1 Mehl p 21 Slabaugh p 73 Taxay p 117 Yeoman pp 294 295 Books Bowers Q David 1992 Commemorative Coins of the United States A Complete Encyclopedia Wolfeboro NH Bowers and Merena Galleries Inc Flynn Kevin 2008 The Authoritative Reference on Commemorative Coins 1892 1954 Roswell GA Kyle Vick OCLC 711779330 Mehl B Max 1937 The Commemorative Coinage of the United States Fort Worth TX B Max Mehl Slabaugh Arlie R 1975 United States Commemorative Coinage second ed Racine WI Whitman Publishing then a division of Western Publishing Company Inc ISBN 978 0 307 09377 6 Swiatek Anthony 2012 Encyclopedia of the Commemorative Coins of the United States Chicago KWS Publishers ISBN 978 0 9817736 7 4 Swiatek Anthony Breen Walter 1981 The Encyclopedia of United States Silver amp Gold Commemorative Coins 1892 to 1954 New York Arco Publishing ISBN 978 0 668 04765 4 Taxay Don 1967 An Illustrated History of U S Commemorative Coinage New York Arco Publishing ISBN 978 0 668 01536 3 Vermeule Cornelius 1971 Numismatic Art in America Cambridge MA The Belknap Press of Harvard University Press ISBN 978 0 674 62840 3 Yeoman R S 2014 A Guide Book of United States Coins 2015 68th ed Atlanta GA Whitman Publishing LLC ISBN 978 0 7948 4180 5 Listen to this article 15 minutes source source nbsp This audio file was created from a revision of this article dated 17 June 2016 2016 06 17 and does not reflect subsequent edits Audio help More spoken articles Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title United States Sesquicentennial coinage amp oldid 1114981128, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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