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1800 - 1808
The half cent was America's unwanted coin from its
introduction in 1793 until its official demise in 1857. Over this
60-year span, few of the coins circulated freely, and then mainly in
the larger cities of the rapidly expanding nation. Coin collectors
long neglected the denomination. Little sought and studied even
less, the coins were aptly characterized by numismatist Dr. Warren
A. Lapp as the stepchildren of U.S. coinage, the "little half
sisters."
First issued in 1793 with the Flowing Hair design, they were
replaced the following year by Engraver Robert Scot's Liberty Cap
motif. They went through design, weight and edge-marking changes
much like those of contemporary cents. The last Liberty Cap and Pole
half cents bore the date 1797 but were probably struck through 1799.
Half Cents dated 1800 were the first to bear Scot's Draped Bust
design. This amply proportioned Liberty was based on a drawing by
the great artist Gilbert Stuart and portrayed a ranking Philadelphia
society leader and beauty, Mrs. William Bingham. Stuart, perhaps the
most famous American portrait painter of his time, finished his
sketch in 1795. Determined to eliminate the existing Flowing Hair
designs, Mint Director Henry William DeSaussure promptly ordered
John Eckstein to make bas-relief models from Stuart's drawing. In
Eckstein's hands, what started out as a beauty emerged as a
distinctly dowdy matron. The new Liberty appeared on the 1795 dollar
and on minor silver coins and large cents in 1796. Typically, it was
placed on the half cents last in 1800, with LIBERTY above and the
date below. The new coins of 1800 continued the existing wreath
reverse already in use, and plain edges were standard for the
design. The laurel wreath is a close copy of that appearing on 1797
cents, showing 16 leaves on the left branch and 19 on the right.
Branches and leaves were impressed into the dies with a single,
prepared punch, with berries and stem ends added by hand. Sometimes
the stems were accidentally omitted by overworked Mint coiners. With
UNITED STATES OF AMERICA at the border, HALF CENT at center and
fraction 1/200 below, the design was complete.
Like the large cents, Draped Bust half cents boast many minor
varieties. The general collector following popular guide books will
be satisfied with the major "naked eye'' varieties. Coins of 1800
are uncomplicated, though about 10% were struck on stock made from
cut-down large cents rolled out by the Mint's horse-powered mill,
with the balance made from England's Boulton and Watt Co. planchets.
Demand for this denomination was light, and no half cents were
struck dated 1801.
Between 14,000 and 20,000 coins were struck after the 1800 obverse
die was overdated to 1802 and combined with two different reverse
dies. A very small number show the 1797 reverse with its single
leaves at top. A far larger number show one leaf at left top, two at
right. All 1802/0 half cents were struck from rolled-down, spoiled
cents.
The coins of 1803 show minor varieties of the fraction. 1804 is a
far busier date with either plain or crosslet 4's in the date and
reverses with or without stem ends. The infant U.S. Mint was still
suffering from a crippling shortage of high quality die steel, and
half cents dated 1804 continued to be struck through 1806. Many of
these backdated coins display the boldly visible "Spiked Chin" with
its sharp projections into the field from chin and lips, the result
of damage to the die. Half cents of 1805 include the medium 5
obverse combined with a stemless reverse and large or small 5
obverses with stems. Coins of 1806 show a small 6 with or without
stems and a large 6 with stems only. Just one variety exists for
1807, distinguished by a very tall 7 apparently intended for cent
coinage.
In April, 1807, German-born John Reich joined the Mint staff after
escaping from indentured service with the generous aid of a Mint
official. He began work at once on wholly new designs for several
denominations, but the Scot Draped Bust half cent was inexplicably
continued, with three varieties dated 1808. Some 400,000 were
struck, although there were 167,000 half cents already sitting idly
in storage. Coinage of this final date began with a bold 1808/7
overdate. Later coins were struck from a die in storage bearing only
the digits 180 and to which the final 8 was added by overlapping two
small `o' punches to create the Tall 8 variety.
The hard-driving Reich worked his way around to half cents late in
1808, and his Classic Head made its first appearance on the
denomination in 1809. By then a total of 3,416,950 Draped Bust half
cents had been struck, all at the Philadelphia Mint. No proofs or
presentation strikes were made.
All dates of the Draped Bust series are rare in full, mint red. Type
collectors will most often find spotty, red examples of the 1800 and
1806 issues. Hoards surfaced of these two dates, the 1800s from one
found in Boston in the 1930s and the 1806s from dealer Henry
Chapman's discovery around 1906. Generally the most attractive
pieces available today display an even, glossy brown. Striking
quality varies with die states, and dies were often used far beyond
their prime. Many surviving coins show varying degrees of wear, and
both mechanical damage and active corrosion readily attack the soft
copper. Wear first appears on the hair behind Liberty's ear and on
the drapery at her shoulder. On the reverse, check the leaves near
the S and the second T in STATES.
While large cents were heavily researched even in the 19th century,
the number of meaningful studies of half cents can be counted on the
fingers of one hand. The slow development of collector interest is
mirrored by the long years of service seen by Ebenezer Gilbert's
1916 handbook, The United States Half Cents. Only in 1971 did a
modern work appear, Roger S. Cohen's American Half Cents, the Little
Half Sisters. Walter Breen published his Encyclopedia of U.S. Half
Cents in 1983, the most thorough treatment of this long-neglected
series to date.
One positive result of this neglect is that Draped Bust half cents
are comparatively undervalued today, an interesting contrast to
large cents or early silver coins of the same era. The coins provide
a window through which today's collector can catch a glimpse of the
country's exciting years of early growth and development.
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