|
Centennial Gold and Silver Coins
Aharon's Jewish Books and Judaica
600 South Holly Street Suite 103
Denver, Colorado 80246
Open
Monday - Thursday from 9 am to 6 pm
Friday and Sunday from 9 am to 4 pm
Call anytime - leave a message: 303-835-8892
The
United States large cent was a coin with a face
value of 1/100 of a United States dollar. Its
diameter varied between 27mm and 29mm. The first
official mintage of the large cent was in 1793, and
its production continued until 1857, when it was
officially replaced by the modern-size one-cent coin
(commonly called the penny).
List of designs
* Flowing Hair 1793
o Flowing Hair, chain reverse 1793
o Flowing Hair, wreath reverse 1793
o Liberty Cap 1793–1796
* Draped Bust 1796–1807
* Classic Head 1808–1814
* Matron Head, or Middle Dates 1816–1839
* Braided Hair, or Late Dates 1839–1857
General history
The best publication explaining the development of
US Large Cents is Penny Whimsy written by Dr.
William H. Sheldon in collaboration with Dorothy I.
Paschal and Walter Breen. The organization devoted
to the study and collecting of US Large Cents is
Early American Coppers (EAC).
Flowing Hair cents, chain reverse (1793)
Henry Voight's design was almost universally
criticized in its time for its unattractiveness and
perceived allusion to slavery. It bears the
distinction, however, of being the first official
coinage minted by the federal government on its own
equipment and premises. 36,103 were minted. Its low
survival rate on top of a small mintage, coupled
with being the first regular federal issue and a
one-year design and type, has created an extremely
strong demand from generations of numismatists. As a
result, all surviving specimens command high prices
ranging from $2,000-$3,000 in the absolute lowest
state of preservation to over $500,000 in the
highest.
Flowing Hair cents, wreath reverse (1793)
The Mint caved to the intense ridicule later in
1793, and Mint Director David Rittenhouse ordered
Adam Eckfeldt to revise the obverse and reverse
designs. Liberty's bust was redesigned with even
longer, wilder hair, and the chain was removed from
the reverse in favor of a wreath. Scholars are
undecided as to what plant or plants are depicted in
the wreath, with several varieties extant. Total
mintage of the wreath reverse numbered about 63,000
pieces.
Liberty Cap cents (1793–1796)
Rittenhouse was dissatisfied with Eckfeldt's
designs, and with the criticism of the Chain cents
fresh in his mind, he hired Joseph Wright to do yet
another redesign in the denomination's troubled
first year. Wright's design faced Liberty to the
right and "tamed" her wild hair. The cap was added
as an ancient symbol of freedom. The reverse design
was revised to a recognizable laurel wreath, and
future Chief Engraver Robert Scot had a hand in
several minor revisions to the design over the next
three years.
This design was more successful and it was continued
into 1796. In 1795, planchets became too thin for
the edge lettering because of a weight reduction, so
the mint stopped edge lettering on the cent, and the
rest of these coins were made with a plain edge.
Four coins from 1795 are known to have a reeded
edge.[1]
Draped Bust cents (1796–1807)
Robert Scot redesigned the whole of United States
coinage for 1796, applying a new design featuring a
bust of Liberty wearing a drapery at the neckline
and a ribbon in her flowing hair. The reverse design
now featured an olive wreath. As with earlier types,
several minor revisions to the design were made in
the first few years, with the final 1797 design
lasting through the end of the type in 1807.
Classic Head cents (1808–1814)
John Reich, assistant to Chief Engraver Scot, was
appointed by new Mint Director Robert Patterson to
redesign Scot's Draped Bust cent (along with every
other circulating coin design). The so-called
"Classic Head" derives its name from the fillet worn
by Liberty on the obverse, though the fillet was
worn only by male athletes in ancient Greece. The
copper used during the years in which Classic Head
cents were minted was of a higher quality,
containing less metallic impurity. Consequently,
they were softer and more prone to wear and corrode
quickly than issues before or after. As a result,
unimpaired, high-grade specimens are especially
difficult to obtain and fetch strong premiums when
they appear on market, especially with original red
or red-brown mint lustre.
Coronet cents (1816–1857)
Matron Head, or Middle Dates (1816–1839)
As a response to public criticism of the Classic
Head, the Mint assigned Chief Engraver Scot to
redesign the cent in 1816. This newest design
enlarged the obverse portrait, giving Liberty a much
more mature look (leading to the Matron Head
reference), and surrounded the portrait with stars
along the outer edge of the coin.
Braided Hair, or Late Dates (1839–1857)
Facing more negative public reaction, the Coronet
cents were redesigned in 1839 by new Chief Engraver
Christian Gobrecht. This last major change to the
coin updated the obverse by giving Liberty a
slimmer, more youthful appearance. Minor tweaks
continued through 1843, and the 1843 design
prevailed through the end of mintage in 1857. Some
11 years after the large cent was discontinued, a
mint employee coined several large cents dated 1868,
almost certainly for sale as instant rarities to
numismatists. Fewer than a dozen of these unofficial
issues, struck in both bronze and copper-nickel, are
known to survive. |