1808-14 CENT CLASSIC HEAD LIBERTY 
Image courtesy of Heritage Numismatic Auctions
This historical information is provided
complements of NGC (Numismatic Guarantee Corporation). NGC is the
"grading service of choice" of the ANA (American Numismatic
Association), the largest collector oriented organization in the United
States. NGC is one of the two largest independent grading services.
NGC has been grading coins since 1987, and have graded in excess of two
and one half million coins. Mention the word "classic"
and people think of works that are beautiful and enduringGreek and
Roman statues, Shakespearean sonnets, even luxury cars from a bygone
era. The so-called "Classic Head" large cent produced by the
United States Mint in the early 1800s is old enough to be thought of in
that context, but it's not exactly "classic" in terms of
beauty. On the contrary, its portraiture is plain, some might even say
homely. And yet, while it may be misnamed, it is viewed with great
affection by many collectors.
The large, copper cents issued by the Mint during the
nation's formative years underwent frequent changes in design. Four
major changes occurred before cent coinage was even five years old, and
lesser variations took place with regularity within these basic types.
A semblance of stability seemed to have been established when the Draped
Bust design introduced in 1796 not only lasted through the turn of the
new century but actually completed 10 full years of production. But in
1806, a new director, Robert Patterson, took command at the Mint, and
that signaled yet another shake-up for the coinage, including the cent.
The U.S. coins being issued at that time all bore
designs by the Mint's chief engraver, Robert Scot: The silver and minor
coins carried Draped Bust portraits of Miss Liberty, while Capped Bust
likenesses appeared on the gold coins. Mint Director Patterson clearly
wasn't impressed, for in 1807 he commissioned new designs for each and
every one of these coins.
The handwriting was on the wall for Scot (and in the mail) when
Patterson wrote to President Thomas Jefferson in March of 1807
suggesting that Scot's "advancing age" (he was then 62) made
his "good health" doubtful. On that basis, he sought
authorization to hire John Reich, a talented young engraver, to serve as
Scot's assistant and redesign the coinage, arguing that
"the beauty of our coins would be greatly improved by the
assistance of his masterly hand." Jefferson acceded, and on April 1
of that year, Patterson promoted Reich, then an unsung die-sinker at
the Mint, to the post of assistant engraver.
Reich has gained a wide following among collectors in
the nearly two centuries since then. An organization of numismatists
enamored of coins of the era bears his name. But his monetary reward was
minimal at the time: He earned only $600 a yearnot much more than the
wages being paid to common laborers. Then again, the ill-used artist
had little leverage: Escaping the Napoleonic Wars, he had come to the
United States from his native Germany as an indentured servant.
Reich's assignment from Patterson was all-inclusive: He
revamped every coin from the half cent through the half eagle, the
lowest and highest denominations then being produced. His obverse design
for the cent (and half cent) was a left-facing portrait of Liberty with
curly hair, tied with a headband inscribed LIBERTY. Miss Liberty is
surrounded by 13 stars, seven to the left and six to the right, with
the date below her. The coin's reverse carries the statement of value,
ONE CENT, within a continuous wreath. This, in turn, is encircled by
the inscription UNITED STATES OF AMERICA. Reich's depiction of Liberty
has often been referred to as the "Turban Head" portrait, a
name it was given by 19th-century coin dealer Edouard Frossard. Either
Frossard or collectors interpreting his remarks are confused: Liberty
wears no hat of any type on the copper coins, sporting only a headband.
Perhaps Frossard was referring to the cap or turban appearing on the
gold and silver coins. The late Walter Breen, a renowned numismatic
scholar, tartly observed, Frossard "probably had never seen a real
turban." The term "Classic Head" is credited to
Ebenezer Locke Mason Jr., who proposed it in his hobby periodical,
Mason's Coin and Stamp Collector's Magazine, in 1868. The "classical"
connection is the fillet, or narrow headband, a device which dates back
to ancient Greece. But the parallelism is flawed, for only young male
athletes wore fillets in ancient times: They were prizes awarded to
winners of local sporting competitions.
Production of the new design began in 1808, with just
over one million pieces struck. A cent shortage developed the following
year, however, when the Mint ran out of planchets. Official records
state that 222,867 cents were made in 1809, but research has uncovered
that nearly 50,000 cents minted in June of 1809 may have been struck
with leftover 1808 dies. Production returned to normal in 1810; in
fact, that year's output of 1,458,500 was the highpoint for the series.
But a roller-coaster ride began in 1811 when mintage fell to 218,025,
the series' low point, rising sharply in 1812, then dropping again
appreciably in 1813. After a final low-mintage year in 1814, the
abbreviated series came to an end. Short of planchets again in 1815, the
Mint made no cents with that datethe only year missing from U.S. cent
coinage from 1793 to the present. In 1816, when production resumed, the
cent bore Robert Scot's new and undistinguished "Matron Head"
design.
Combined total mintage for the series' seven dates is
just 4,757,722all from the Philadelphia Mint. There are no great
rarities in the series, but no "common dates" either. The
scarcest date is 1809, usually seen darkly colored and porous, a
condition familiar to much of the series. Classic Head cents are widely
collected by date; dedicated hobbyists often include the overdates and
other varieties in their sets, as well. Type collectors pursue the more
commonly found 1814 coins, with their generally sharper strikes and
occasional touches of mint red. The Mint made no proofs, but some
partially mint-red and prooflike examples of 1810 are known, discovered
in a tiny hoard in the 1930s. Points to check for wear include the hair
above Liberty's eye and the leaves next to the O in ONE and the T in
CENT.
Classic Head cents are relatively scarce in every
collectible grade, but exceptionally so in mint condition. This is
partly due to the unusual softness of the inferior quality planchets
received from the British firm of Boulton and Watt, but also due to
supply and demand: The large number of collectors pursuing the early
coppers has always limited the number of choice pieces available for
sale. Unfortunately, there have been no hoards discovered of any
consequence. The numismatic fraternity is limited to the small number
of high-grade specimens that very infrequently return to the fold from
one of their own.
Collectors with more than a casual interest in this series would
be well advised to delve into the large wealth of information available
on these and other early large cents, most notably
Penny Whimsy, the updated version of Dr. William H. Sheldon's
definitive work on the large coppers,
Early American Cents. Sheldon's variety and Condition Census
numbering system is the standard among large cent aficionados, many of
who claim membership in the Early American Coppers Club (EAC).
SPECIFICATIONS:
Diameter: 29 millimeters Weight: 10.89 grams Composition:
Copper Edge: Plain
BIBLIOGRAPHY:
Bowers, Q. David, United States Coins by Design Types, An
Action Guide for the Collector and Investor, Bowers and Merena,
Wolfeboro, NH, 1986.
Breen, Walter, Walter Breen's Complete Encyclopedia of U.S.
and Colonial Coins, F.C.I. Press/Doubleday, New York, 1988.
Noyes, William C., United States Large Cents 1793-1814,
Published by the author, Monument Beach, MA, 1991.
Sheldon, William H., Penny Whimsy, Revision of Early
American Cents 1794-1814, Quarterman Publications (reprint), Lawrence,
MA, 1976.
Taxay, Don, The U.S. Mint and Coinage, Arco Publishing
Co., New York, 1966.
Yeoman, R.S., A Guide Book of United States Coins, 47th
Edition, Western Publishing Co., Racine, WI, 1993.
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