A Bully Birthday

Few noticed and seemed to care, but as numismatists, we should have been in celebration for the 150th anniversary of the birth of Theodore Roosevelt. Roosevelt was known as a reformer with a real vision as to how to modernize a nation still recovering from a bloody Civil War and draconian laws from the Victorian Age. Roosevelt was a man of strength and a man of peace. Roosevelt was the first US citizen to win Alfred Nobel’s prize, the first sitting president to be so awarded (the only other sitting president to win the Nobel Peace Prize was Woodrow Wilson for his founding of the League of Nations, the forerunner to the United Nations). He earned this honor for negotiating the 1905 peace treaty ending the Russo-Japanese War.

For us numismatists, Roosevelt initiated the “Golden Age of American Coin Design.” Using his bully pulpit, he held the designs of the US Mint’s Chief Engraver Charles E. Barber in contempt and ordered coinage whose designs were more than 25 years old to be redesigned. Roosevelt was a fan of sculptor Augustus Saint-Gaudens and asked Saint-Gaudens to redesign the small cent. Rather than use the Liberty design in an Indian Headdress for the small cent, it was used on the 1907 $10 gold coin. Roosevelt also asked Saint-Gaudens to design the $20 gold double eagle coin to rival the beauty of all classic coins.

Unfortunately, Saint-Gaudens died of cancer before he could redesign the small cent. Roosevelt continued to look to revitalize US coinage and seized on Abraham Lincoln’s 100th birthday to redesign the small cent. He was steered to Victor David Brenner, whose bust of Lincoln was used as the model for the new Lincoln Cent first issued in 1909. Not only was Lincoln the first president to appear on a circulating coin, but Brenner’s obverse is still in use today.

Roosevelt called his coinage redesign his “pet crime.”

The impact of Roosevelt’s redesign continues to be felt today. Saint-Gaudens’ image of Liberty from the $20 coin is being used today on the American Eagle Gold Bullion Coins. And don’t forget the 2009 Ultra High Relief Double Eagle Gold Coin, which is based on a reported pattern of the original Saint-Gaudens design.

It is difficult to understand why the youngest inaugurated president and the first to win the Nobel Peace Prize while in office has not had a commemorative coin made for him.

Happy Birthday, President Roosevelt. We numismatists thank you for your “pet crime!”

Defence of Fort McHenry

The War of 1812 had been running for two years when the fighting escalated in Baltimore Harbor around Fort McHenry. American Prisoner Exchange Agent Colonel John Stuart Skinner sent by the War Department to negotiate the release of Dr. William Beanes. Dr. Beanes was allegedly mistakenly arrested with a group of rowdies as he walked to his home.

On Skinner’s way to meet Vice Admiral Alexander Cochrane, Rear Admiral Sir George Cockburn, and Major General Robert Ross on the HMS Tonnant, he stopped at the home of noted lawyer Francis Scott Key and asked for his assistance.

Col. Skinner and Key were welcomed by the British command on September 13, 1814 and was invited to stay for dinner. After secure the release of Dr. Beanes but were not allowed to return to Baltimore. The British felt that Col. Skinner and Key had learned too much about the British forces. Col. Skinner, Key, and Dr. Beanes were provided guest accommodations on the HMS Tonnant.

The Battle of Baltimore began after dinner and raged overnight through the next morning. On September 14, 1814, when the smoke cleared, Key saw the Stars and Stripes still flying over Fort McHenry. Following the battle. Col. Skinner, Key, and Dr. Beanes were allowed to return to Baltimore on their own boat. During the trip, Key wrote a poem entitled “The Defence of Fort McHenry”

On September 20, 1814, Key had the poem published in the newspaper Patriot. After publication, Key set the poem to the tune of John Stafford Smith’s “The Anacreontic Song,” a popular drinking song written for London’s Anacreontic Society. The combination was renamed “The Star Spangled Banner.”

“The Star Spangled Banner” was first recognized by the Navy in 1889. In 1916, President Woodrow Wilson signed an executive order to recognize “The Star-Spangled Banner” as the national anthem. Finally, President Herbert Hoover singed a congressional bill officially making the song the United State’s National Anthem (36 U.S.C. §301).

In June 2007, Rep. Dutch Ruppersberger (D-MD) introduced H.R. 2894, Star-Spangled Banner and War of 1812 Bicentennial Commemorative Coin Act. The bill calls for the minting of 350,000 silver $1 coins “in commemoration of the bicentennial of the writing of the Star-Spangled Banner and the War of 1812.”

The bill calls for the “design of the coins minted under this Act shall be emblematic of the War of 1812 and particularly the Battle for Fort McHenry that formed the basis for the ‘Star-Spangled Banner’.” A $10 surcharge (total of $3.5 million) will be paid to the Maryland War of 1812 Bicentennial Commission.

H.R. 2894 passed the House of Representatives on May 15, 2008. It was received by the Senate on May 19, 2008 and eferred to the Committee on Banking, Housing, and Urban Affairs.

Image of Fort McHenry courtesy of the Maryland Office of Tourism

Another Inwood Collectible: Check!

Did you know that there was a part of numismatics that collects financial documents? Collecting financial documents is a niche hobby for people who collect checks, drafts, bills of exchange, certificates of deposit, promissory notes, receipts, and even stock certificates. Although I knew that there were collectors of financial documents, I just found American Society of Check Collectors (ASCC). If you want to learn more about this area of numismatics, visit their website.

In keeping with my theme of “hometown numismatics,” I found a check drawn on The First National Bank of Inwood (FNBI). This check was written by Elizabeth N. Schmitt on November 20, 1942 for $19.37 to General Motors Acceptance Corp. It cleared the Bank of Manhattan office in Jamaica, Queens on November 27. That would be the same as paying $261.39 in 2008 dollars.

While we do not know when the Ms. Schmitt purchased her automobile or if she was paying the bill while her husband was away to fight in World War II, it is another collectible from FNBI for the collection.

My research found a Series 1929 $20 banknote was issued from FNBI (CH# 12460). I found notes priced from $500 to $1300, depending on condition. I guess I will have to save some money for my next purchase.

Edited: Sorry… I forgot the image of the check!

Collecting Personal History in Numismatics

In 1938, President Franklin Delano Roosevelt founded the March of Dimes. That year Howard Hughes set a record by flying an airplane for 91 hours around he world. It was the same year as Douglas “Wrong Way” Corrigan landed in Ireland after allegedly trying to fly to California claiming navigation problems.

Roosevelt launched a $5 billion spending program (roughly $78 billion in 2008 money) to try to stimulate the economy after the Recession of 1937. The US also established minimum wage laws. The radio adaptation of H.G. Wells’s The War of the Worlds broadcast by Orson Welles causes panic, especially in the northeast.

The New York Yankees beat the Chicago Cubs 4-0 in the 1938 World Series and the New York Giants defeated the Green Bay Packers in the 1938 NFL championship game. Seabiscuit beat War Admiral in the “Match of the Century” at Pimlico in Baltimore.

1938 Encased Cent from the First National Bank of Inwood (NY)

1938 Encased Cent from the First National Bank of Inwood (NY)

In 1938, the First National Bank of Inwood on Long Island produced an encased Lincoln Cent to advertise the bank. What few records exist suggest that it was common for banks to create 100 to 500 of these encased cents distributed to customer and potential customers in the Inwood community. This one has survived 70 years intact.

The First National Bank of Inwood (FNBI) was founded in 1923, the same year Yankee Stadium opened with a Babe Ruth home run. It was founded by former members of Bank of Manhattan to take advantage of the migration to the suburbs as new immigrants started to move into the areas of New York City. FNBI was able to survive the Great Depression through good management and extending good will to the community. FNBI was the first bank on Long Island to offer drive-through teller windows in 1950.

FNBI eventually merged with Franklin National Bank (formerly Franklin Square National Bank) in 1954. During the 1960s, a Belgium bank consortium working with a German bank consortium bought Franklin National Bank in 1968 to form European-American National Bank—rename European-American Bank (EAB) in 1972. EAB was a fixture on Long Island until Citigroup purchased the bank in 2001.

Inwood is one of the Five Towns along with Lawrence, Cedahurst, Woodmere, and Hewlett. The Five Towns are located in the southwest corner of Nassau County, near the Far Rockaway, Queens border. My parents move their young family to Inwood in 1965 so that their oldest son (me) would not go to the failing New York City Public Schools.

As I reflect on my youth in Inwood through the long lens of time, I have fond memories of the good times. So when I find a numismatic souvenir of Inwood, regardless of when it is from, it has to become part of my collection.

History Detectives Investigates Annie Oakley Coin

One of my favorite television shows is History Detectives, the PBS show featuring four investigators with interests in antiques, history, and sociology research the background and history of artifacts in the possession of ordinary Americans. It is one of the most popular series on PBS.

The show enters its sixth season starting on June 30. The first episode will feature Elyse Luray investigating a coin with a bent, split edge that may have been shot by Annie Oakley during a Buffalo Bill Wild West Show and given to the contributor’s great-grand uncle.

There are two issues for this investigation: was the great-grand uncle in a place to be able to receive the coin and was the coin something that would have been used by Oakley in the show? The coin is an 1853 two Centimes coin from France. Would that coin have been available in America during the mid-ninteenth century?

You can find out when the show will be aired in your area from the PBS website. If you do not mind a little spoiler before watching the show, you can write up by Susan Headly, the moderator at coins.about.com.

Image courtesy of PBS.org

I Have Not Owned It For All Of Its 125 Years!

On May 24, 1883, thousands of people crowded lower Manhattan and Brooklyn for the grandest of all ceremonies from all over the area—even as far away as Philadelphia. Dignitaries gathered at the armory of the Seventh Regiment on Park Avenue to board carriages to join a colour guard, a 70-piece band, and a 22-piece drum corp for the festivities. Forty mounted police officers accompanied the parade.

The list of dignitaries was a Who’s Who of the political America that included President Chester A. Arthur, New York Governor Grover Cleveland, and New York City Mayor Franklin Edson. The carriage carrying President Arthur and Mayor Edson lead the parade surrounded by a very large cheering crowd.

At 1:50 PM, the processional arrived at the entrance of the new bridge, President Arthur and Mayor Edson left their carriage and crossed what was the world’s longest suspension bridge arm-in-arm to a cheering crowd who paid $2 for tickets to watch from the bridge.

The band played Hail to the Chief as ships who came to the ceremony and anchored around the East River blew horns to honor the President. Navy ships who were invited to the ceremonies took turns giving 21-gun salutes.

Present Arthur and Mayor Edson were joined by Brooklyn Mayor Seth Low when they arrived on the other side of the new bridge. The three men locked arms and marched to the Brooklyn Pier to complete the ceremony dedicating the Brooklyn Bridge to the people of the New York City and Brooklyn.

Kickoff for the Brooklyn Bridge 125th Anniversary Celebration began on May 22 with a concert by the Brooklyn Philharmonic and fireworks by the Gruccis, the first family of fireworks. The celebration extends through Monday that includes a walking tour of this impressive structure on Saturday, the anniversary.

In honor of the 125th Birthday of the bridge everyone owns, the image to the right is a bronze medal commemorating her Centennial (click to enlarge). This medal was produced by the Medallic Arts Company for Brooklyn Union Gas. Silver medals were made for the company’s executives. Bronze medals were given to some employees and offered for sale to the public. When the company that owns Brooklyn Union Gas merged with the Long Island Lighting Company (LILCo) in 1998, the company changed its name to KeySpan Energy. In 2007, KeySpan was bought by National Grid plc of London.

By the way… I have a bridge I can sell to you. Let me know and I can give you a good deal!

Source: “Two Great Cities United,” [PDF] The New York Times, May 25, 1883.

Happy Birthday Harry

Harry S Truman became the 33rd President of the United States following the death of Franklin D. Roosevelt in 1945, a few months into Roosevelt’ fourth term. Truman presided over the end of the World War II in Europe and the decisive victory over Japan. He also oversaw the signing of the first United Nations charter.

Controversy followed Truman through his presidency which the close election in 1948 against Thomas E. Dewey. Amongst Truman’s controversial accomplishments was helping establish the North Atlantic Treaty Organization (NATO) and the integration of the armed forces. History has been kinder to Truman than were his critics during the 1952 election.

Harry S Truman was born on May 8, 1884 in Lamar, Missouri making today his 124th birthday. In celebration of Truman’s birthday, the US Mint sent out a release noting that they sell a 15/16-inch bronze medal honoring Truman’s inaugurations. The medal was design by John R. Sinnock (obverse) and Gilroy Roberts (reverse) was struck at the Philadelphia Mint.

Happy Birthday and give ’em hell, Harry!

Paulson and Understanding Common Cents

History tells us that the first coinage legislation was devised primarily by Secretary of the Treasury Alexander Hamilton with Secretary of State Thomas Jefferson. These fathers of the United States understood that the new, struggling nation needed its own monetary system that had to be accepted by the public. The eventual law became the foundation of our monetary system.

When Hamilton decided a decimal coinage system was best, he was looking at how the people were using the Spanish Milled Dollar (8 reales) and cutting it up for minor coinage. The pieces were called “bits.” He also saw the continued circulation of British copper coins. The highest denomination circulated in the colonies was a sixpence since the king used the lower coinage in an attempt to control the populace. These coins were used a decimal fraction of the Milled Dollar. It was a natural progression.

Jefferson and Hamilton proposed new United States coins that would be used along side their British and Spanish counterparts until the country could produce enough coinage to drive the foreign coins out of circulation. Jefferson proposed that the new United States coins be similar in size to the coins in circulation. Thus the bill passed by the first congress included a half-cent as the same size of the half-pence, the one cent as the same size of the one penny, the half-disme was the same size as the threepence, and so on.

Hamilton pursued the minting of the half-cent because he felt that if the cent was the lowest denomination, the prices for common commodities would have to be raised. About the half-cent Hamilton said that to “enable the porrer classes to procure necessaries cheap, is to enable them, with more comfort to themselves, to labor for less; the advantages of which need no comment.” The half-cent was also necessary to replace the half-penny and provide change for the bit, which is one-eighth of a Milled Dollar.

The half-cent survived until the passage of the Coinage Act of 1857 which eliminated the half-cent, approved the minting of the small cent, and demonetize foreign coins circulating in the United States. Since the half-cent was not a popular coin, the economy adjusted and found that half-cent pricing was voluntarily eliminated Also, without the bit being legal tender, there was no longer a need to make half-cent change. Within a short time, a few years by some accounts, both the half-cent and large cent were no longer being circulated.

In the United States, we hold our founding fathers in reverence because of how their work has survived. While these men were not perfect, their wisdom and foresight has survived wars, crime, corruption, economic crises, and terrorism for over 200 years. It is a self-correcting system that was designed to grow with the nation. During this evolution, economic concerns and support for the poor have been paramount in economic policy.

This might have changed on February 29, 2009, when the current Secretary of the Treasury Henry Paulson told Spike O’Dell of WGN in Chicago that the penny should be eliminated saying, “The penny is worth less than any other currency.” Paulson, who can turn a phrase as well as his boss, also shows that he is out of touch with the rest of America when he said, “I walk around with very little cash in my pocket, like everyone else.”

Apparently Paulson, the former chairman of Goldman Sachs, does not venture far from his office at the Department of the Treasury into southeast Washington or into areas of northeast where lesser advantaged people live who do not have a pocket full of credit cards. And with credit issues being at the center of the current economic crises, it is irresponsible for the government’s leading financial manager to pitch pennies for those who have to pinch pennies.

Those who want to end the production of the cent says that cash payments would be rounded. But at whose advantage? When there was an issue with the half-cent, the market adjusted on its own. So when the coin was eliminated in 1857, there was almost no economic impact. However, prices are not rounded, sales taxes are calculated in fractions, and the coin is used many transactions.

The United States has been striking one-cent coins every year since 1793. It is the most common coin, yet has produced some legendary coins like the Large Cent, the 1856 Flying Eagle Cent, 1877 Indian Head Cent, the 1909-S VDB, and the king of all errors the 1955 Doubled Die Obverse.

While the elite like Paulson and Richard Safire never consider the person who driving their limousines, the rest of us worry about the impact on the economy and the injustice its removal from the market would bring. All they consider is that the rising price of zinc and the production process of the United States Mint, it costs 1.6-cents to strike one coin, which allegedly affects the taxpayer.

What they do not tell the public is that the US Mint does not receive any appropriations from the Treasury General Fund. All of the operations of the US Mint (and the Bureau of Engraving and Printing) are funded through the Public Enterprise Fund. The PEF is a special account where the profits from the sales of coins, called seignorage, are deposited. Whether the sale is to collectors, or to the Federal Reserve Bank branches who pay face value for the coins, the difference from the manufacturing process and the purchase is deposited in the PEF. When congress determines the budget for the US Mint, the money used is withdrawn from the PEF. Congress then uses the balance for other purposes.

The Mint and BEP are manufacturers of money that are profit making organizations, and they have a very good profit record—better than any top ranked company. They have become self-sustaining agencies with a financial record better than most other government agencies. Unfortunately, that does not enter the discussion of the detractors.

Another area the detractors discount is the good that can happen from the penny. Remember the Penny Harvest Field that was on display in December at Rockefeller Center in New York City? While the pennies are being counted for the 2007 effort, the 2006 project collected over $643,000 for New York area charities. For a coin that allegedly has little to no purchasing power, that is a lot of money to support good programs.

Many of us who started collecting at a young age would either rummage through our parents’ change or worked cutting grass, delivering newspapers, and other odd jobs where the payment helped fuel that passion. Pennies were easy. We would buy the ubiquitous blue Whitman Folders and try to fill the holes with what we find. It was an inexpensive way to start a collection and have some fun. Today, there are companies that bulk lots from hoards that can be searched to create a nice collection of circulated coins. It is the same principle accounting for the economic changes since I started collecting 38 years ago.

Whether you are a collector, investor, or concerned citizen, I urge you to consider all of the facts. While the Ruppert Murdock-owned Wall Street Journal mentions the near dormant Citizens for Retiring the Penny whose only argument is that pennies cost too much to make, organizations like Americans for Common Cents looks to educate people with carefully constructed and referenced facts.

As a collector and taxpaying citizen of the United States, I believe Paulson and his ilk are wrong and should not be in a position of power with an attitude he has shown. As I type this, he will be in his job no more than the next 319 days!

I will leave you with one last thought: If the cent is obsolete and economically infeasible with little buying power, then why is the Federal Reserve ordering so many for circulation?

Weekend Coin Finds Part I

I know there has been a lot of news on the numismatic front. I know the spot price of gold closed at over $800 per ounce. But it is the weekend and it is time for some fun. Since this is my blog, I want to show off some recent finds—especially since I have not done that in a while.

In a previous post, I discussed competitive collecting 1976 coinage. These are the Washington Quarters, Kennedy Halves, and Eisenhower Dollars with the special reverse to commemorate the American Revolution Bicentennial. These coins are of great interest because they are the first change in coinage following my interest in collecting. In fact, I continue to search change looking for the Jack Ahr Drummer Boy design on the reverse of the Washington Quarter. Not including commemorative coinage, the change in location of mint marks, or a change in alloys, this was the first temporary change in coin design on a continuing series.

Aside from competitive collecting, I would like to put together a competitive exhibit for an ANA convention about the 1976 coinage. In order to do that, I need a few “wow” items. Sure, I have the history—including copies of the laws that authorized that various coins—but there has to be a real eye catcher. I think I found it. How about three PCGS slabbed, gem proof coins with the labels autographed by the artists who designed the reverses!

These are three beautiful coins with very deep cameos placed in the slabs with the reverse facing the front and the autograph of the artists on the label. After winning the quarter and half-dollar very easily in a Teletrade online auction, it had taken another three months to win the Dennis Williams designed dollar. But looking at this set, it was worth the wait!

This is the first coin find posts of this weekend. Have a good weekend and stay tuned for a few other items that fit my “oh neat” criteria.

BEP Gives Us a Wi-5

Next in the series of updated Federal Reserve Notes (FRN) from the Bureau of Engraving and Printing (BEP) will be the redesigned five dollar bill. According to the BEP press release, BEP will unveil the new design on September 20, 2007, will be presented online and accessible directly to the general public in an event they are calling “Wi-5.”

“A digital unveiling for the redesigned $5 bill provides a new opportunity to engage people in the public education process,” said Dawn Haley, Chief of the Office of External Relations at the Treasury’s Bureau of Engraving and Printing, “We hope that the ‘Wi-5’ theme will get consumers excited about the new bill and encourage them to use the resources on our Web site to learn about its security features and protect their hard-earned money.”

Following the online introduction, a question and answer period will take place with registered reporters. The general public will be able to observe the online Q&A session but will not be allowed to participate. This is a new format for the government and the media covering government activities. Prior commitments will prevent this blogger from participating, but I will be able to comment from the transcripts that will be posted on the BEP website.

BEP released the first redesigned note with advanced security mechanisms and color in 2003 with the redesign of the $20 FRN. The new note included a security thread embedded in the paper that runs vertically that includes “USA” and the denomination of the note. Color shifting ink was added to the 20 at the bottom right so that the color would change as you would move the bill. Finally, a watermark was added to a blank area to the right of the portrait of Alexander Hamilton with an image of the portrait. The same mechanisms were added to the $50 (2004) and $10 (2006) FRN.

BEP reports that counterfeiting has been reduced since the introduction of the new notes and increased law enforcement activitities.

A re-designed $100 note will be released in early 2008 completing the updates. BEP does not plan to update the $1 and $2 FRN.

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