1859-73 SILVER THREE CENTS TYPE 3 
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. In 1859, little more than
a decade after the start of the California Gold Rush, new gold and
silver bonanzas again captured the attention of the nation. Vast
deposits of the precious metals were discovered outside Denver, Colorado
and in the famous Comstock Lode in Nevada. Much of this material wealth
found its way to the mints in Philadelphia and San Francisco, where it
was turned into coinage. Unfortunately, the growing distrust and
divisiveness between the North and South would culminate two years later
in the Civil War, leading to the demise of precious metal coins in
commerce, and ultimately to the end of the silver three-cent piece as a
circulating coin.
Silver three-cent pieces (Type 1) were first introduced
in 1851 to facilitate the purchase of three-cent stamps. The initial
composition of 75% silver and 25% copper was designed to deter hoarding
and melting of the coin as was occurring with the other 90% silver
coins then in circulation. In 1853, Congress lowered the weights of all
the silver coins, simultaneously raising the silver content of the
three-cent piece to 90%, although at a reduced weight. Since the value
of the silver in all the new coins was low enough to discourage
hoarding, they circulated freely along with the new three-cent pieces,
which appeared in 1854. These "Type 2" silver three-cent
pieces featured the addition of three outlines to the star on the
obverse and arrows and an olive branch on the reverse.
The modifications made to the Type 2 coins exacerbated
problems with striking up the design completely, and five years later
more changes were made in hopes of bringing up all the design elements.
In 1859, Chief Engraver James Longacre made minor adjustments to the
coin. Assisted by Anthony C. Paquet, Longacre retained the basic design
of the large six-pointed star on the obverse and the Roman numeral III
in the center of the reverse surrounded by the letter C, but he reduced
the number of outlines around the central star from three to two. In
addition, he used narrower letters and spaced them farther apart than on
the Type 2 coins, and he also reduced the size of the numerals in the
date. These alterations were apparently enough to make the tiny silver
pieces (derisively called "fish scales") strike up better
than their Type 1 or 2 counterparts. Unfortunately, after these changes
were made and the Mint produced a better quality product, the coins
only circulated for four years. The outbreak of the Civil War would
again cause all silver coins to disappear.
In the mid-1850s, the Mint paid a price for bullion
slightly above the current market price, a practice that effectively
divided the seignorage (the profit the Mint derives from producing
coinage) between the government and the bullion owner. This meant that
the amount of silver coinage was not determined by the public's need for
change but by the amount of silver bullion sold to the Mint. As a
result, there was a tremendous surplus of small copper, copper-nickel
and silver coinage in the nation in the late 1850sso much that small
coinage was looked upon as a public nuisance. When the war broke out,
this situation was radically altered. The federal government suspended
specie (coin) payments for paper currency in 1862, and the glut of small
change was quickly reduced to a trickle, as every coin with intrinsic
value was either hoarded domestically or exported to Canada, the West
Indies or Central America. The production of silver three-cent pieces
during this period graphically illustrates the boom and bust cycle of
U.S. coinage. From 1859 through 1862, the mintage of these small silver
coins averaged 373,000 coins annually. For the eleven years afterward,
annual mintages plummeted to an average of only 8,171 coins.
All Type 3 silver three-cent pieces were struck in the
Philadelphia Mint. Over the 15 years represented by the design,
1,581,490 business strikes were produced. This is a misleading figure,
however, as most of these coins were produced from 1859 through 1862.
After 1862, virtually no silver three-cent pieces found their way into
the channels of commerce, and both the business strikes and proofs
remaining on hand at the Mint in 1873 were melted in the summer of that
year. As a result, business strikes from 1863 to 1873 are great
rarities. Consequently, few collectors are willing to attempt completion
of a set of business strikes of the Type 3 design, and today silver
three-cent pieces are almost exclusively used as type coins. Oddly
enough, some high grade business strikes known from this period
actually came from proof sets. Apparently, in the 1860s and `70s, the
Mint was not careful about the distinction between the two methods of
manufacture, and if a proof was not available for sets, a business
strike was substituted. Proofs were made in each year of the Type 3
series and the scarcest date is the proof-only issue of 1873, of which
only 600 pieces were struck. At least two business strike overdates
exist: the relatively common 1862/1 and the very rare 1869/8. An
overdated proof is knownthe 1863/2a rarely encountered coin that is
technically a restrike and apparently produced in 1864, along with some
restrike proofs bearing that date.
When grading silver three-cent pieces, it is often
necessary to use a magnifier because of the small size of the coin.
Friction first shows on the top ridges of the star on the obverse and on
the Roman numeral on the reverse. Counterfeits were made in large
numbers during the Civil War, but the date and lettering differ from
authentic pieces, and these pieces were not struck in silver but in
some form of so-called German silver (a nickel alloy). Dangerous
forgeries surfaced in 1984 of the 1864 dated restrike. These pieces
allegedly originated in England and differ from genuine coins, as the
digits of the date are thinner and placed higher in the field, and all
show a dent on the lower left corner of the obverse star. When silver
three-cent pieces were abolished by the Mint Act of 1873, few people
noticed. The coins had not been seen in circulation since the early
days of the Civil War, and they had become redundant to the nation's
coinage needs when the nickel three-cent coin was successfully
introduced in 1865. Today, only numismatists remember these tiny coins
and the important part they played in the nation's coinage system in
the late 1850s and the early days of the Civil War.
SPECIFICATIONS:
Diameter: 14 millimeters Weight: .75 grams Composition:
.900 silver, .100 copper Edge: Plain Net Weight: .0217 ounce
pure silver
BIBLIOGRAPHY:
Bowers, Q. David, United States Coins by Design Types, Bowers
and Merena Galleries, Wolfeboro, NH, 1986.
Breen, Walter, Walter Breen's Complete Encyclopedia of U.S. and
Colonial Coins, F.C.I./Doubleday, New York, 1988.
Carothers, Neil, Fractional Money, A History of Small Coins and
Fractional Paper Currency of the United States, John Wiley & Sons,
London, 1930.
Taxay, Don, The U.S. Mint and Coinage, Arco Publishing Co., New
York, 1966.
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