1829-37 HALF DIME CAPPED BUST 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. In the United States of
1829, people's living conditions varied widely. The typical workingman
made less than eighty cents for a day's work, and at least 75,000
Americans were languishing in debtors' prisons, most of them for debts
of less than $20. Meanwhile, in Boston, the newly opened Tremont Hotel,
said to be the nation's first modern hostelry, offered guests a private
room with a key, four square meals and a free cake of soap, all for the
modest sum of $2 a day. But rich or poor, at least no one had to long
wistfully for a good five-cent cigar: Five cents would have bought
several good cigars in that long-ago year.
People buying five cents' worth of any item in 1829 could have
given merchants exact change for their purchases in a number of
different ways. Large copper cents and half cents, for example, both saw
regular use in everyday commerce. The "nickel" however, did
not yet come into being; it would not be issued until 1866. Prior to
that, the only five-cent coin was a small silver piece known as the
half dime. Unlike the present-day nickel, it contained very close to
five cents' worth of metal, for at that time Americans insisted on
coinage with high intrinsic value.
The half dime (or half disme, as it was spelled
initially) was one of the very first coins produced by the United States
Mint. Workmen employed by the Mint struck 1,500 half dismes in a
Philadelphia cellar on July 13, 1792, before the federal government had
even acquired the site for the nation's first mint building. Part of
the silver bullion used to make these coins reportedly consisted of
tableware provided by President George Washington himself. These coins
were official Mint issues, even though they're categorized as pattern
or provisional pieces.
The Philadelphia Mint struck its first regular-issue
half dimes in 1794; they featured the so-called Flowing Hair portrait
of Liberty. A Draped Bust portrait replaced this design in 1796 and
remained in production through 1805first in combination with a
small-eagle reverse and then, from 1800 onward, with a heraldic eagle.
At that point, however, the half dime made an unexplained exit from the
nation's coinage lineup, not to reappear for more than two decades. The
late Walter Breen, a renowned numismatic scholar, theorized that banks
may have preferred the more readily available Mexican half-reale coin,
worth one-sixteenth of a dollar, which circulated side by side with
U.S. federal coins and like them, had legal-tender status.
Not until 1829, the year of Andrew Jackson's arrival at the
White House, did the half dime finally emerge from hibernation. When it
did, it had a different look. For one thing, it was slightly smaller in
diameter (although its weight was the same). More noticeably, it had
undergone a face lift: The Draped Bust design was gone, and in its place
was a left-facing portrait of Liberty with curly hair tucked inside a
mobcap (a cap with a high, puffy crown)a likeness sometimes called the
Turban Head but more commonly referred to as the Capped Bust. Gone, as
well, was the old heraldic eagle; instead, the reverse depicted a
naturalistic eagle with a shield superimposed on its breast.
These were not entirely new designs: Portraits very much like
them had graced some of the nation's larger silver coins (the half
dollar, quarter and dime) since as far back as 1807, when the basic
designs were fashioned by German-born Mint engraver John Reich. They
were new to the half dime, thoughand in any case William Kneass, the
Mint's chief engraver in 1829, had modified Reich's portraits
sufficiently to be credited as designer of the later Capped Bust issues.
Thirteen stars encircle the Capped Bust portrait of
Liberty, and the date appears below her. On the reverse, E PLURIBUS
UNUM is inscribed on a ribbon just above the eagle, UNITED STATES OF
AMERICA hugs the upper rim, and the statement of value is shown below
the eagle as 5 C.
The Capped Bust half dime's lifespan coincided almost
exactly with Andrew Jackson's tenure in the White House. It was issued
annually from 1829 through 1837the year "Old Hickory" returned
to Tennessee after finishing two terms as the nation's seventh
president. Production took place entirely at the Philadelphia Mint; the
first branch mints didn't start issuing coins until 1838, by which time
the Capped Bust half dime had been replaced by the Seated Liberty type
(both types having been struck in 1837).
By the standards of the time, mintage levels were relatively
high throughout the series' brief life. Annual output fell below a
million in only two of the nine different years in which the coin was
made, and on both of those occasions, it didn't miss the million mark
by much. Mintages ranged from a high of 2.76 million in 1835 to a low of
871,000 in 1837 and totaled just over 13 million for the series' entire
run.
There are a number of interesting die varieties, but
only one of theman 1837 with a small "5 C." commands a
significant premium. The "5 C." exists in large and small
varieties not only for 1837 but also for 1835 and 1836, and 1835 comes
with large and small dates, as well as combinations of date and
denomination sizes. Breen reported that very small numbers of proofs
are known for some dates, ranging as high as 20 or more in 1829 and
1831. The Mint wasn't selling proof coins routinely at the time, so
these were most likely presentation pieces or coins struck to order for
the few "insider" collectors of the day.
Capped Bust half dimes are relatively plentiful in grade
levels up to Mint State-64 and fairly abundant even in MS-65. The
supply drops off sharply, however, in grades of MS-66 and above. Points
to check for wear include the drapery at the tip of Liberty's bust, the
hair above her eye and the edges of the eagle's wings.
Given the brevity of the series and the absence of any
major rarities, collectors would face no formidable obstacles in
putting together a complete date set of Capped Bust half dimes. In
practice, however, many are content to treat it as a type coin and
acquire just a single high-grade piece to represent the series as a
whole.
SPECIFICATIONS:
Diameter: approximately 15.5 millimeters Weight:
1.35 grams Composition: .8924 silver, .1076 copper Edge:
Reeded Net Weight: .03873 ounce pure silver
BIBLIOGRAPHY:
Breen, Walter, Walter Breen's Complete Encyclopedia of U.S.
and Colonial Coins, F.C.I. Press/Doubleday, New York, 1988.
Morris, Richard B., Encyclopedia of American History,
5th Edition, Harper & Row, New York, 1976.
Taxay, Don, The U.S. Mint and Coinage, Arco Publishing
Co., New York, 1966.
Valentine, D.W., The United States Half Dimes, American
Numismatic Society, New York, 1931.
Yeoman, R.S., A Guide Book of United States Coins, 47th
Edition, Western Publishing Co., Racine, WI, 1993.
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